JOURNAL ARTICLE

Colección de plantas aromáticas

Pedro López Bornay

Year: 2001 Journal:   QEJ. Bricojardinería & paisajismo: Revista profesional de distribución en horticultura ornamental y jardinería Vol: 8 (79)Pages: 28-31

Abstract

A general theory views the function of all neurons as prediction, and one component of this theory is that of "predictive homeostasis" or "prediction error." It is well established that sensory systems adapt so that neuronal output maintains sensitivity to sensory input, in accord with information theory. Predictive homeostasis applies the same principle at the cellular level, where the challenge is to maintain membrane excitability at the optimal homeostatic level so that spike generation is maximally sensitive to small gradations in synaptic drive. Negative feedback is a hallmark of homeostatic mechanisms, as exemplified by depolarization-activated potassium channels. In contrast, T-type calcium channels exhibit positive feedback that appears at odds with the theory. In thalamocortical neurons of lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), T-type channels are capable of causing bursts of spikes with an all-or-none character in response to excitation from a hyperpolarized potential. This "burst mode" would partially uncouple visual input from spike output and reduce the information spikes convey about gradations in visual input. However, past observations of T-type-driven bursts may have resulted from unnaturally high membrane excitability. Here we have mimicked within rat brain slices the patterns of synaptic conductance that occur naturally during vision. In support of the theory of predictive homeostasis, we found that T-type channels restored excitability toward its homeostatic level during periods of hyperpolarization. Thus, activation of T-type channels allowed two retinal input spikes to cause one output spike on average, and we observed almost no instances in which output count exceeded input count (a "burst"). T-type calcium channels therefore help to maintain a single optimal mode of transmission rather than creating a second mode. More fundamentally our results support the general theory, which seeks to predict the properties of a neuron's ion channels and synapses given knowledge of natural patterns of synaptic input.

Keywords:
Political science

Metrics

0
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Mediterranean and Iberian flora and fauna
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Plant Science

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

PLANTAS AROMÁTICAS:

Maria Juíva Marques de Faria SouzaAna Paula Luciano da SilvaNágilla Navarro de Oliveira

Journal:   Revista Extensão & Sociedade Year: 2020 Vol: 10 (1)Pages: 24-34
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Plantas-curativas plantas-aromáticas

Ing. Agr. Miguel Montalván

Journal:   Americanae (AECID Library) Year: 2015
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Plantas aromáticas, aromas de verdad

Xavier Safont Tria

Journal:   QEJ. Bricojardinería & paisajismo: Revista profesional de distribución en horticultura ornamental y jardinería Year: 2007 Vol: 75 (151)Pages: 38-40
DISSERTATION

Cultivo e processamento de plantas aromáticas

João Filipe Domingues Lopes

University:   Expert Review of Cardiovascular Therapy Year: 2014 Vol: 10 (2)Pages: 167-75
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Plantas medicinales y aromáticas en la Argentina

E. MongelliHugo D. ChludilSilvia R. Leicach

Journal:   Ciencia hoy Year: 2009 Vol: 19 (111)Pages: 53-60
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.