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Electroreceptor Model of Weakly Electric Fish Gnathonemus petersii: II. Cellular Origin of Inverse Waveform Tuning

Authors :
Takeshi Kambara
Gerhard von der Emde
Osamu Hoshino
Jianwei Shuai
Yoshiki Kashimori
Source :
Biophysical Journal. 76:3012-3025
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1999.

Abstract

In part I (Shuai et al. 1998. Biophys. J . 75:1712–1726), we presented a cellular model of the A- and B-electroreceptors of the weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii. The model made clear the cellular origin of the differences in the response functions of A- and B-receptors, which sensitively code the intensity of the fish's own electric organ discharge (EOD) and the variations in the EOD waveform, respectively. The main purpose of the present paper is to clarify the cellular origin of the inverse waveform tuning of the B-receptors by using the receptor model. Inverse waveform tuning means that B-receptors respond more sensitively to the 180° inverted EOD than to undistorted or less distorted EODs. We investigated how the A- and B-receptor models respond to EODs with various waveforms, which are the phase-shifted EODs, whose shift angle is varied from −1° to −180°, and single-period sine wave stimuli of various frequencies. We show that the tuning properties of the B-receptors arise mainly from the combination of two attributes: 1) The waveform of the stimuli ( B stim ) effectively sensed by the B-receptor cells. This consists of a first smaller and a second larger positive peak, even though in the original phase-shifted EOD stimuli, the amplitudes of the two positive peaks are reversed. 2) The effective time constant of dynamical response of the receptor cells. It is on the order of the duration of a single EOD pulse. We also calculated the response properties of the A- and B-receptor models when stimulated with natural EODs distorted by various capacitive and resistive objects. Furthermore, we investigated the effect of EOD amplitude on the receptor responses to capacitive and resistive objects. The models presented can systematically reproduce the experimentally observed response properties of natural A- and B-receptor cells. The mechanism producing these properties can be reasonably explained by the variation in the stimulus waveforms effectively sensed by the A- and B-receptor cells and by time constants.

Details

ISSN :
00063495
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa20a7e221dd4cb2121e5203d2045c35
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0006-3495(99)77454-0