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Interplay of activation kinetics and the derivative conductance determines resonance properties of neurons

Abstract

In a neuron with hyperpolarization activated current (IhI_h), the correct input frequency leads to an enhancement of the output response. This behavior is known as resonance and is well described by the neuronal impedance. In a simple neuron model we derive equations for the neuron's resonance and we link its frequency and existence with the biophysical properties of IhI_h. For a small voltage change, the component of the ratio of current change to voltage change (dI/dVdI/dV) due to the voltage-dependent conductance change (dg/dVdg/dV) is known as derivative conductance (GhDerG_h^{Der}). We show that both GhDerG_h^{Der} and the current activation kinetics (characterized by the activation time constant τh\tau_h) are mainly responsible for controlling the frequency and existence of resonance. The increment of both factors (GhDerG_h^{Der} and τh\tau_h) greatly contributes to the appearance of resonance. We also demonstrate that resonance is voltage dependent due to the voltage dependence of GhDerG_h^{Der}. Our results have important implications and can be used to predict and explain resonance properties of neurons with the IhI_h current.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure

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