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Hodgkin–Huxley model

The Hodgkin–Huxley model, or conductance-based model, is a mathematical model that describes how action potentials in neurons are initiated and propagated. It is a set of nonlinear differential equations that approximates the electrical engineering characteristics of excitable cells such as neurons and muscle cells. It is a continuous-time dynamical system.

Basic components of Hodgkin–Huxley-type models which represent the biophysical characteristic of cell membranes. The lipid bilayer is represented as a capacitance (Cm). Voltage-gated and leak ion channels are represented by nonlinear (gn) and linear (gL) conductances, respectively. The electrochemical gradients driving the flow of ions are represented by batteries (E), and ion pumps and exchangers are represented by current sources (Ip).

Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley described the model in 1952 to explain the ionic mechanisms underlying the initiation and propagation of action potentials in the squid giant axon.[1] They received the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for this work.

Basic components Edit

The typical Hodgkin–Huxley model treats each component of an excitable cell as an electrical element (as shown in the figure). The lipid bilayer is represented as a capacitance (Cm). Voltage-gated ion channels are represented by electrical conductances (gn, where n is the specific ion channel) that depend on both voltage and time. Leak channels are represented by linear conductances (gL). The electrochemical gradients driving the flow of ions are represented by voltage sources (En) whose voltages are determined by the ratio of the intra- and extracellular concentrations of the ionic species of interest. Finally, ion pumps are represented by current sources (Ip).[clarification needed] The membrane potential is denoted by Vm.

Mathematically, the current flowing through the lipid bilayer is written as

 

and the current through a given ion channel is the product of that channel's conductance and the driving potential for the specific ion

 

where   is the reversal potential of the specific ion channel. Thus, for a cell with sodium and potassium channels, the total current through the membrane is given by:

 

where I is the total membrane current per unit area, Cm is the membrane capacitance per unit area, gK and gNa are the potassium and sodium conductances per unit area, respectively, VK and VNa are the potassium and sodium reversal potentials, respectively, and gl and Vl are the leak conductance per unit area and leak reversal potential, respectively. The time dependent elements of this equation are Vm, gNa, and gK, where the last two conductances depend explicitly on the membrane voltage (Vm) as well.

Ionic current characterization Edit

In voltage-gated ion channels, the channel conductance is a function of both time and voltage (  in the figure), while in leak channels,  , it is a constant (  in the figure). The current generated by ion pumps is dependent on the ionic species specific to that pump. The following sections will describe these formulations in more detail.

Voltage-gated ion channels Edit

Using a series of voltage clamp experiments and by varying extracellular sodium and potassium concentrations, Hodgkin and Huxley developed a model in which the properties of an excitable cell are described by a set of four ordinary differential equations.[1] Together with the equation for the total current mentioned above, these are:

 
 
 
 

where I is the current per unit area and   and   are rate constants for the i-th ion channel, which depend on voltage but not time.   is the maximal value of the conductance. n, m, and h are dimensionless probabilities between 0 and 1 that are associated with potassium channel subunit activation, sodium channel subunit activation, and sodium channel subunit inactivation, respectively. For instance, given that potassium channels in squid giant axon are made up of four subunits which all need to be in the open state for the channel to allow the passage of potassium ions, the n needs to be raised to the fourth power. For  ,   and   take the form

 
 

  and   are the steady state values for activation and inactivation, respectively, and are usually represented by Boltzmann equations as functions of  . In the original paper by Hodgkin and Huxley,[1] the functions   and   are given by

 

where   denotes the negative depolarization in mV.

In many current software programs [2] Hodgkin–Huxley type models generalize   and   to

 

In order to characterize voltage-gated channels, the equations can be fitted to voltage clamp data. For a derivation of the Hodgkin–Huxley equations under voltage-clamp, see.[3] Briefly, when the membrane potential is held at a constant value (i.e., with a voltage clamp), for each value of the membrane potential the nonlinear gating equations reduce to equations of the form:

 
 
 

Thus, for every value of membrane potential   the sodium and potassium currents can be described by

 
 

In order to arrive at the complete solution for a propagated action potential, one must write the current term I on the left-hand side of the first differential equation in terms of V, so that the equation becomes an equation for voltage alone. The relation between I and V can be derived from cable theory and is given by

 

where a is the radius of the axon, R is the specific resistance of the axoplasm, and x is the position along the nerve fiber. Substitution of this expression for I transforms the original set of equations into a set of partial differential equations, because the voltage becomes a function of both x and t.

The Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm is often used to fit these equations to voltage-clamp data.[4]

While the original experiments involved only sodium and potassium channels, the Hodgkin–Huxley model can also be extended to account for other species of ion channels.

Leak channels Edit

Leak channels account for the natural permeability of the membrane to ions and take the form of the equation for voltage-gated channels, where the conductance   is a constant. Thus, the leak current due to passive leak ion channels in the Hodgkin-Huxley formalism is  .

Pumps and exchangers Edit

The membrane potential depends upon the maintenance of ionic concentration gradients across it. The maintenance of these concentration gradients requires active transport of ionic species. The sodium-potassium and sodium-calcium exchangers are the best known of these. Some of the basic properties of the Na/Ca exchanger have already been well-established: the stoichiometry of exchange is 3 Na+: 1 Ca2+ and the exchanger is electrogenic and voltage-sensitive. The Na/K exchanger has also been described in detail, with a 3 Na+: 2 K+ stoichiometry.[5][6]

Mathematical properties Edit

The Hodgkin–Huxley model can be thought of as a differential equation system with four state variables,  , and  , that change with respect to time  . The system is difficult to study because it is a nonlinear system, cannot be solved analytically, and therefore has no closed-form solution. However, there are many numerical methods available to analyze the system. Certain properties and general behaviors, such as limit cycles, can be proven to exist.

 
A simulation of the Hodgkin–Huxley model in phase space, in terms of voltage v(t) and potassium gating variable n(t). The closed curve is known as a limit cycle.

Center manifold Edit

Because there are four state variables, visualizing the path in phase space can be difficult. Usually two variables are chosen, voltage   and the potassium gating variable  , allowing one to visualize the limit cycle. However, one must be careful because this is an ad-hoc method of visualizing the 4-dimensional system. This does not prove the existence of the limit cycle.

A better projection can be constructed from a careful analysis of the Jacobian of the system, evaluated at the equilibrium point. Specifically, the eigenvalues of the Jacobian are indicative of the center manifold's existence. Likewise, the eigenvectors of the Jacobian reveal the center manifold's orientation. The Hodgkin–Huxley model has two negative eigenvalues and two complex eigenvalues with slightly positive real parts. The eigenvectors associated with the two negative eigenvalues will reduce to zero as time t increases. The remaining two complex eigenvectors define the center manifold. In other words, the 4-dimensional system collapses onto a 2-dimensional plane. Any solution starting off the center manifold will decay towards the center manifold. Furthermore, the limit cycle is contained on the center manifold.

 
The voltage v(t) (in millivolts) of the Hodgkin–Huxley model, graphed over 50 milliseconds. The injected current varies from −5 nanoamps to 12 nanoamps. The graph passes through three stages: an equilibrium stage, a single-spike stage, and a limit cycle stage.

Bifurcations Edit

If the injected current   were used as a bifurcation parameter, then the Hodgkin–Huxley model undergoes a Hopf bifurcation. As with most neuronal models, increasing the injected current will increase the firing rate of the neuron. One consequence of the Hopf bifurcation is that there is a minimum firing rate. This means that either the neuron is not firing at all (corresponding to zero frequency), or firing at the minimum firing rate. Because of the all-or-none principle, there is no smooth increase in action potential amplitude, but rather there is a sudden "jump" in amplitude. The resulting transition is known as a canard.

Improvements and alternative models Edit

The Hodgkin–Huxley model is regarded as one of the great achievements of 20th-century biophysics. Nevertheless, modern Hodgkin–Huxley-type models have been extended in several important ways:

  • Additional ion channel populations have been incorporated based on experimental data.
  • The Hodgkin–Huxley model has been modified to incorporate transition state theory and produce thermodynamic Hodgkin–Huxley models.[7]
  • Models often incorporate highly complex geometries of dendrites and axons, often based on microscopy data.
  • Conductance-based models similar to Hodgkin-Huxley model incorporate the knowledge about cell types defined by single cell transcriptomics.[8]
  • Stochastic models of ion-channel behavior, leading to stochastic hybrid systems.[9]
  • The Poisson–Nernst–Planck (PNP) model is based on a mean-field approximation of ion interactions and continuum descriptions of concentration and electrostatic potential.[10]

Several simplified neuronal models have also been developed (such as the FitzHugh–Nagumo model), facilitating efficient large-scale simulation of groups of neurons, as well as mathematical insight into dynamics of action potential generation.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF (August 1952). "A quantitative description of membrane current and its application to conduction and excitation in nerve". The Journal of Physiology. 117 (4): 500–44. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004764. PMC 1392413. PMID 12991237.
  2. ^ Nelson ME (2005) Electrophysiological Models In: Databasing the Brain: From Data to Knowledge. (S. Koslow and S. Subramaniam, eds.) Wiley, New York, pp. 285–301
  3. ^ Gray DJ, Wu SM (1997). Foundations of cellular neurophysiology (3rd ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts [u.a.]: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-10053-3.
  4. ^ Krapivin, Vladimir F.; Varotsos, Costas A.; Soldatov, Vladimir Yu. (2015). New Ecoinformatics Tools in Environmental Science : Applications and Decision-making. Springer. pp. 37–38. ISBN 9783319139784.
  5. ^ Rakowski RF, Gadsby DC, De Weer P (May 1989). "Stoichiometry and voltage dependence of the sodium pump in voltage-clamped, internally dialyzed squid giant axon". The Journal of General Physiology. 93 (5): 903–41. doi:10.1085/jgp.93.5.903. PMC 2216238. PMID 2544655.
  6. ^ Hille B (2001). Ion channels of excitable membranes (3rd ed.). Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer. ISBN 978-0-87893-321-1.
  7. ^ Forrest, M. D. (May 2014). "Can the Thermodynamic Hodgkin–Huxley Model of Voltage-Dependent Conductance Extrapolate for Temperature?" (PDF). Computation. 2 (2): 47–60. doi:10.3390/computation2020047.
  8. ^ Nandi, Anirban; Chartrand, Thomas; Van Geit, Werner; Buchin, Anatoly; Yao, Zizhen; Lee, Soo Yeun; Wei, Yina; Kalmbach, Brian; Lee, Brian; Lein, Ed; Berg, Jim; Sümbül, Uygar; Koch, Christof; Tasic, Bosiljka; Anastassiou, Costas A. (2022-08-09). "Single-neuron models linking electrophysiology, morphology, and transcriptomics across cortical cell types". Cell Reports. 40 (6): 111176. doi:10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111176. ISSN 2211-1247. PMC 9793758. PMID 35947954. S2CID 215790820.
  9. ^ Pakdaman, K.; Thieullen, M.; Wainrib, G. (2010). "Fluid limit theorems for stochastic hybrid systems with applications to neuron models". Adv. Appl. Probab. 42 (3): 761–794. arXiv:1001.2474. Bibcode:2010arXiv1001.2474P. doi:10.1239/aap/1282924062. S2CID 18894661.
  10. ^ Zheng, Q.; Wei, G. W. (May 2011). "Poisson-Boltzmann-Nernst-Planck model". Journal of Chemical Physics. 134 (19): 194101. Bibcode:2011JChPh.134s4101Z. doi:10.1063/1.3581031. PMC 3122111. PMID 21599038.

Further reading Edit

  • Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF (April 1952). "Currents carried by sodium and potassium ions through the membrane of the giant axon of Loligo". The Journal of Physiology. 116 (4): 449–72. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004717. PMC 1392213. PMID 14946713.
  • Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF (April 1952). "The components of membrane conductance in the giant axon of Loligo". The Journal of Physiology. 116 (4): 473–96. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004718. PMC 1392209. PMID 14946714.
  • Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF (April 1952). "The dual effect of membrane potential on sodium conductance in the giant axon of Loligo". The Journal of Physiology. 116 (4): 497–506. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004719. PMC 1392212. PMID 14946715.
  • Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF (August 1952). "A quantitative description of membrane current and its application to conduction and excitation in nerve". The Journal of Physiology. 117 (4): 500–44. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004764. PMC 1392413. PMID 12991237.
  • Hodgkin AL, Huxley AF, Katz B (April 1952). "Measurement of current-voltage relations in the membrane of the giant axon of Loligo". The Journal of Physiology. 116 (4): 424–48. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1952.sp004716. PMC 1392219. PMID 14946712.

External links Edit

  • Interactive Javascript simulation of the HH model Runs in any HTML5 – capable browser. Allows for changing the parameters of the model and current injection.
  • Interactive Java applet of the HH model Parameters of the model can be changed as well as excitation parameters and phase space plottings of all the variables is possible.
  • Direct link to Hodgkin–Huxley model and a Description in BioModels Database
  • Neural Impulses: The Action Potential In Action by Garrett Neske, The Wolfram Demonstrations Project
  • Interactive Hodgkin–Huxley model by Shimon Marom, The Wolfram Demonstrations Project
  • ModelDB A computational neuroscience source code database containing 4 versions (in different simulators) of the original Hodgkin–Huxley model and hundreds of models that apply the Hodgkin–Huxley model to other channels in many electrically excitable cell types.
  • Several articles about the stochastic version of the model and its link with the original one.

hodgkin, huxley, model, conductance, based, model, mathematical, model, that, describes, action, potentials, neurons, initiated, propagated, nonlinear, differential, equations, that, approximates, electrical, engineering, characteristics, excitable, cells, suc. The Hodgkin Huxley model or conductance based model is a mathematical model that describes how action potentials in neurons are initiated and propagated It is a set of nonlinear differential equations that approximates the electrical engineering characteristics of excitable cells such as neurons and muscle cells It is a continuous time dynamical system Basic components of Hodgkin Huxley type models which represent the biophysical characteristic of cell membranes The lipid bilayer is represented as a capacitance Cm Voltage gated and leak ion channels are represented by nonlinear gn and linear gL conductances respectively The electrochemical gradients driving the flow of ions are represented by batteries E and ion pumps and exchangers are represented by current sources Ip Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley described the model in 1952 to explain the ionic mechanisms underlying the initiation and propagation of action potentials in the squid giant axon 1 They received the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for this work Contents 1 Basic components 2 Ionic current characterization 2 1 Voltage gated ion channels 2 2 Leak channels 2 3 Pumps and exchangers 3 Mathematical properties 3 1 Center manifold 3 2 Bifurcations 4 Improvements and alternative models 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBasic components EditThe typical Hodgkin Huxley model treats each component of an excitable cell as an electrical element as shown in the figure The lipid bilayer is represented as a capacitance Cm Voltage gated ion channels are represented by electrical conductances gn where n is the specific ion channel that depend on both voltage and time Leak channels are represented by linear conductances gL The electrochemical gradients driving the flow of ions are represented by voltage sources En whose voltages are determined by the ratio of the intra and extracellular concentrations of the ionic species of interest Finally ion pumps are represented by current sources Ip clarification needed The membrane potential is denoted by Vm Mathematically the current flowing through the lipid bilayer is written as I c C m d V m d t displaystyle I c C m frac mathrm d V m mathrm d t nbsp and the current through a given ion channel is the product of that channel s conductance and the driving potential for the specific ion I i g i V m V i displaystyle I i g i V m V i nbsp where V i displaystyle V i nbsp is the reversal potential of the specific ion channel Thus for a cell with sodium and potassium channels the total current through the membrane is given by I C m d V m d t g K V m V K g N a V m V N a g l V m V l displaystyle I C m frac mathrm d V m mathrm d t g K V m V K g Na V m V Na g l V m V l nbsp where I is the total membrane current per unit area Cm is the membrane capacitance per unit area gK and gNa are the potassium and sodium conductances per unit area respectively VK and VNa are the potassium and sodium reversal potentials respectively and gl and Vl are the leak conductance per unit area and leak reversal potential respectively The time dependent elements of this equation are Vm gNa and gK where the last two conductances depend explicitly on the membrane voltage Vm as well Ionic current characterization EditIn voltage gated ion channels the channel conductance is a function of both time and voltage g n t V displaystyle g n t V nbsp in the figure while in leak channels g l displaystyle g l nbsp it is a constant g L displaystyle g L nbsp in the figure The current generated by ion pumps is dependent on the ionic species specific to that pump The following sections will describe these formulations in more detail Voltage gated ion channels Edit Using a series of voltage clamp experiments and by varying extracellular sodium and potassium concentrations Hodgkin and Huxley developed a model in which the properties of an excitable cell are described by a set of four ordinary differential equations 1 Together with the equation for the total current mentioned above these are I C m d V m d t g K n 4 V m V K g Na m 3 h V m V N a g l V m V l displaystyle I C m frac mathrm d V m mathrm d t bar g text K n 4 V m V K bar g text Na m 3 h V m V Na bar g l V m V l nbsp d n d t a n V m 1 n b n V m n displaystyle frac dn dt alpha n V m 1 n beta n V m n nbsp d m d t a m V m 1 m b m V m m displaystyle frac dm dt alpha m V m 1 m beta m V m m nbsp d h d t a h V m 1 h b h V m h displaystyle frac dh dt alpha h V m 1 h beta h V m h nbsp where I is the current per unit area and a i displaystyle alpha i nbsp and b i displaystyle beta i nbsp are rate constants for the i th ion channel which depend on voltage but not time g n displaystyle bar g n nbsp is the maximal value of the conductance n m and h are dimensionless probabilities between 0 and 1 that are associated with potassium channel subunit activation sodium channel subunit activation and sodium channel subunit inactivation respectively For instance given that potassium channels in squid giant axon are made up of four subunits which all need to be in the open state for the channel to allow the passage of potassium ions the n needs to be raised to the fourth power For p n m h displaystyle p n m h nbsp a p displaystyle alpha p nbsp and b p displaystyle beta p nbsp take the form a p V m p V m t p displaystyle alpha p V m p infty V m tau p nbsp b p V m 1 p V m t p displaystyle beta p V m 1 p infty V m tau p nbsp p displaystyle p infty nbsp and 1 p displaystyle 1 p infty nbsp are the steady state values for activation and inactivation respectively and are usually represented by Boltzmann equations as functions of V m displaystyle V m nbsp In the original paper by Hodgkin and Huxley 1 the functions a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp are given by a n V m 0 01 10 V exp 10 V 10 1 a m V m 0 1 25 V exp 25 V 10 1 a h V m 0 07 exp V 20 b n V m 0 125 exp V 80 b m V m 4 exp V 18 b h V m 1 exp 30 V 10 1 displaystyle begin array lll alpha n V m frac 0 01 10 V exp big frac 10 V 10 big 1 amp alpha m V m frac 0 1 25 V exp big frac 25 V 10 big 1 amp alpha h V m 0 07 exp bigg frac V 20 bigg beta n V m 0 125 exp bigg frac V 80 bigg amp beta m V m 4 exp bigg frac V 18 bigg amp beta h V m frac 1 exp big frac 30 V 10 big 1 end array nbsp where V V r e s t V m displaystyle V V rest V m nbsp denotes the negative depolarization in mV In many current software programs 2 Hodgkin Huxley type models generalize a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp to A p V m B p exp V m B p C p D p displaystyle frac A p V m B p exp big frac V m B p C p big D p nbsp In order to characterize voltage gated channels the equations can be fitted to voltage clamp data For a derivation of the Hodgkin Huxley equations under voltage clamp see 3 Briefly when the membrane potential is held at a constant value i e with a voltage clamp for each value of the membrane potential the nonlinear gating equations reduce to equations of the form m t m 0 m 0 m 1 e t t m displaystyle m t m 0 m 0 m infty 1 e t tau m nbsp h t h 0 h 0 h 1 e t t h displaystyle h t h 0 h 0 h infty 1 e t tau h nbsp n t n 0 n 0 n 1 e t t n displaystyle n t n 0 n 0 n infty 1 e t tau n nbsp Thus for every value of membrane potential V m displaystyle V m nbsp the sodium and potassium currents can be described by I N a t g N a m V m 3 h V m V m E N a displaystyle I mathrm Na t bar g mathrm Na m V m 3 h V m V m E mathrm Na nbsp I K t g K n V m 4 V m E K displaystyle I mathrm K t bar g mathrm K n V m 4 V m E mathrm K nbsp In order to arrive at the complete solution for a propagated action potential one must write the current term I on the left hand side of the first differential equation in terms of V so that the equation becomes an equation for voltage alone The relation between I and V can be derived from cable theory and is given by I a 2 R 2 V x 2 displaystyle I frac a 2R frac partial 2 V partial x 2 nbsp where a is the radius of the axon R is the specific resistance of the axoplasm and x is the position along the nerve fiber Substitution of this expression for I transforms the original set of equations into a set of partial differential equations because the voltage becomes a function of both x and t The Levenberg Marquardt algorithm is often used to fit these equations to voltage clamp data 4 While the original experiments involved only sodium and potassium channels the Hodgkin Huxley model can also be extended to account for other species of ion channels Leak channels Edit Leak channels account for the natural permeability of the membrane to ions and take the form of the equation for voltage gated channels where the conductance g l e a k displaystyle g leak nbsp is a constant Thus the leak current due to passive leak ion channels in the Hodgkin Huxley formalism is I l g l e a k V V l e a k displaystyle I l g leak V V leak nbsp Pumps and exchangers Edit The membrane potential depends upon the maintenance of ionic concentration gradients across it The maintenance of these concentration gradients requires active transport of ionic species The sodium potassium and sodium calcium exchangers are the best known of these Some of the basic properties of the Na Ca exchanger have already been well established the stoichiometry of exchange is 3 Na 1 Ca2 and the exchanger is electrogenic and voltage sensitive The Na K exchanger has also been described in detail with a 3 Na 2 K stoichiometry 5 6 Mathematical properties EditThe Hodgkin Huxley model can be thought of as a differential equation system with four state variables V m t n t m t displaystyle V m t n t m t nbsp and h t displaystyle h t nbsp that change with respect to time t displaystyle t nbsp The system is difficult to study because it is a nonlinear system cannot be solved analytically and therefore has no closed form solution However there are many numerical methods available to analyze the system Certain properties and general behaviors such as limit cycles can be proven to exist nbsp A simulation of the Hodgkin Huxley model in phase space in terms of voltage v t and potassium gating variable n t The closed curve is known as a limit cycle Center manifold Edit Because there are four state variables visualizing the path in phase space can be difficult Usually two variables are chosen voltage V m t displaystyle V m t nbsp and the potassium gating variable n t displaystyle n t nbsp allowing one to visualize the limit cycle However one must be careful because this is an ad hoc method of visualizing the 4 dimensional system This does not prove the existence of the limit cycle A better projection can be constructed from a careful analysis of the Jacobian of the system evaluated at the equilibrium point Specifically the eigenvalues of the Jacobian are indicative of the center manifold s existence Likewise the eigenvectors of the Jacobian reveal the center manifold s orientation The Hodgkin Huxley model has two negative eigenvalues and two complex eigenvalues with slightly positive real parts The eigenvectors associated with the two negative eigenvalues will reduce to zero as time t increases The remaining two complex eigenvectors define the center manifold In other words the 4 dimensional system collapses onto a 2 dimensional plane Any solution starting off the center manifold will decay towards the center manifold Furthermore the limit cycle is contained on the center manifold nbsp The voltage v t in millivolts of the Hodgkin Huxley model graphed over 50 milliseconds The injected current varies from 5 nanoamps to 12 nanoamps The graph passes through three stages an equilibrium stage a single spike stage and a limit cycle stage Bifurcations Edit If the injected current I displaystyle I nbsp were used as a bifurcation parameter then the Hodgkin Huxley model undergoes a Hopf bifurcation As with most neuronal models increasing the injected current will increase the firing rate of the neuron One consequence of the Hopf bifurcation is that there is a minimum firing rate This means that either the neuron is not firing at all corresponding to zero frequency or firing at the minimum firing rate Because of the all or none principle there is no smooth increase in action potential amplitude but rather there is a sudden jump in amplitude The resulting transition is known as a canard Improvements and alternative models EditMain article Biological neuron model The Hodgkin Huxley model is regarded as one of the great achievements of 20th century biophysics Nevertheless modern Hodgkin Huxley type models have been extended in several important ways Additional ion channel populations have been incorporated based on experimental data The Hodgkin Huxley model has been modified to incorporate transition state theory and produce thermodynamic Hodgkin Huxley models 7 Models often incorporate highly complex geometries of dendrites and axons often based on microscopy data Conductance based models similar to Hodgkin Huxley model incorporate the knowledge about cell types defined by single cell transcriptomics 8 Stochastic models of ion channel behavior leading to stochastic hybrid systems 9 The Poisson Nernst Planck PNP model is based on a mean field approximation of ion interactions and continuum descriptions of concentration and electrostatic potential 10 Several simplified neuronal models have also been developed such as the FitzHugh Nagumo model facilitating efficient large scale simulation of groups of neurons as well as mathematical insight into dynamics of action potential generation See also EditAnode break excitation Autowave Neural circuit Galves Locherbach model GHK flux equation Goldman equation Memristor Neural accommodation Reaction diffusion Theta model Rulkov map Chialvo mapReferences Edit a b c Hodgkin AL Huxley AF August 1952 A quantitative description of membrane current and its application to conduction and excitation in nerve The Journal of Physiology 117 4 500 44 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004764 PMC 1392413 PMID 12991237 Nelson ME 2005 Electrophysiological Models In Databasing the Brain From Data to Knowledge S Koslow and S Subramaniam eds Wiley New York pp 285 301 Gray DJ Wu SM 1997 Foundations of cellular neurophysiology 3rd ed Cambridge Massachusetts u a MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 10053 3 Krapivin Vladimir F Varotsos Costas A Soldatov Vladimir Yu 2015 New Ecoinformatics Tools in Environmental Science Applications and Decision making Springer pp 37 38 ISBN 9783319139784 Rakowski RF Gadsby DC De Weer P May 1989 Stoichiometry and voltage dependence of the sodium pump in voltage clamped internally dialyzed squid giant axon The Journal of General Physiology 93 5 903 41 doi 10 1085 jgp 93 5 903 PMC 2216238 PMID 2544655 Hille B 2001 Ion channels of excitable membranes 3rd ed Sunderland Massachusetts Sinauer ISBN 978 0 87893 321 1 Forrest M D May 2014 Can the Thermodynamic Hodgkin Huxley Model of Voltage Dependent Conductance Extrapolate for Temperature PDF Computation 2 2 47 60 doi 10 3390 computation2020047 Nandi Anirban Chartrand Thomas Van Geit Werner Buchin Anatoly Yao Zizhen Lee Soo Yeun Wei Yina Kalmbach Brian Lee Brian Lein Ed Berg Jim Sumbul Uygar Koch Christof Tasic Bosiljka Anastassiou Costas A 2022 08 09 Single neuron models linking electrophysiology morphology and transcriptomics across cortical cell types Cell Reports 40 6 111176 doi 10 1016 j celrep 2022 111176 ISSN 2211 1247 PMC 9793758 PMID 35947954 S2CID 215790820 Pakdaman K Thieullen M Wainrib G 2010 Fluid limit theorems for stochastic hybrid systems with applications to neuron models Adv Appl Probab 42 3 761 794 arXiv 1001 2474 Bibcode 2010arXiv1001 2474P doi 10 1239 aap 1282924062 S2CID 18894661 Zheng Q Wei G W May 2011 Poisson Boltzmann Nernst Planck model Journal of Chemical Physics 134 19 194101 Bibcode 2011JChPh 134s4101Z doi 10 1063 1 3581031 PMC 3122111 PMID 21599038 Further reading EditHodgkin AL Huxley AF April 1952 Currents carried by sodium and potassium ions through the membrane of the giant axon of Loligo The Journal of Physiology 116 4 449 72 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004717 PMC 1392213 PMID 14946713 Hodgkin AL Huxley AF April 1952 The components of membrane conductance in the giant axon of Loligo The Journal of Physiology 116 4 473 96 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004718 PMC 1392209 PMID 14946714 Hodgkin AL Huxley AF April 1952 The dual effect of membrane potential on sodium conductance in the giant axon of Loligo The Journal of Physiology 116 4 497 506 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004719 PMC 1392212 PMID 14946715 Hodgkin AL Huxley AF August 1952 A quantitative description of membrane current and its application to conduction and excitation in nerve The Journal of Physiology 117 4 500 44 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004764 PMC 1392413 PMID 12991237 Hodgkin AL Huxley AF Katz B April 1952 Measurement of current voltage relations in the membrane of the giant axon of Loligo The Journal of Physiology 116 4 424 48 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1952 sp004716 PMC 1392219 PMID 14946712 External links EditInteractive Javascript simulation of the HH model Runs in any HTML5 capable browser Allows for changing the parameters of the model and current injection Interactive Java applet of the HH model Parameters of the model can be changed as well as excitation parameters and phase space plottings of all the variables is possible Direct link to Hodgkin Huxley model and a Description in BioModels Database Neural Impulses The Action Potential In Action by Garrett Neske The Wolfram Demonstrations Project Interactive Hodgkin Huxley model by Shimon Marom The Wolfram Demonstrations Project ModelDB A computational neuroscience source code database containing 4 versions in different simulators of the original Hodgkin Huxley model and hundreds of models that apply the Hodgkin Huxley model to other channels in many electrically excitable cell types Several articles about the stochastic version of the model and its link with the original one Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hodgkin Huxley model amp oldid 1179847158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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