Article 2020

Simple models including energy and spike constraints reproduce complex activity patterns and metabolic disruptions

In this work, we introduce new phenomenological neuronal models (eLIF and mAdExp) that account for energy supply and demand in the cell as well as the inactivation of spike generation how these interact with subthreshold and spiking dynamics. Including these constraints, the new models reproduce a broad range of biologically-relevant behaviors that are identified to be crucial in many neurological disorders, but were not captured by commonly used phenomenological models. Because of their low dimensionality eLIF and mAdExp open the possibility of future large-scale simulations for more realistic studies of brain circuits involved in neuronal disorders. The new models enable both more accurate modeling and the possibility to study energy-associated disorders over the whole time-course of disease progression instead of only comparing the initially healthy status with the final diseased state. These models, therefore, provide new theoretical and computational methods to assess the opportunities of early diagnostics and the potential of energy-centered approaches to improve therapies.

Author(s): Fardet, T and Levina, A
Journal: {PLoS Computational Biology}
Volume: 16
Number (issue): 12
Pages: 1--22
Year: 2020
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Project(s):
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008503
Address: San Francisco, CA
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{item_3267990,
  title = {{Simple models including energy and spike constraints reproduce complex activity patterns and metabolic disruptions}},
  journal = {{PLoS Computational Biology}},
  abstract = {In this work, we introduce new phenomenological neuronal models (eLIF and mAdExp) that account for energy supply and demand in the cell as well as the inactivation of spike generation how these interact with subthreshold and spiking dynamics. Including these constraints, the new models reproduce a broad range of biologically-relevant behaviors that are identified to be crucial in many neurological disorders, but were not captured by commonly used phenomenological models. Because of their low dimensionality eLIF and mAdExp open the possibility of future large-scale simulations for more realistic studies of brain circuits involved in neuronal disorders. The new models enable both more accurate modeling and the possibility to study energy-associated disorders over the whole time-course of disease progression instead of only comparing the initially healthy status with the final diseased state. These models, therefore, provide new theoretical and computational methods to assess the opportunities of early diagnostics and the potential of energy-centered approaches to improve therapies.},
  volume = {16},
  number = {12},
  pages = {1--22},
  publisher = {Public Library of Science},
  address = {San Francisco, CA},
  year = {2020},
  slug = {item_3267990},
  author = {Fardet, T and Levina, A}
}