Opera Medica et Physiologica

Dynamics of Ion Fluxes between Neurons, Astrocytes and the Extracellular Space during Neurotransmission

Author Affiliations

N. Rouach 1, K. Dao Duc2,3,# †, J. Sibille1,4 #, D. Holcman2,5

1 Neuroglial Interactions in Cerebral Physiopathology, Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Biology, Collège de France, PSL Research University, Paris, France;
2 Group of Computational Biology and Applied Mathematics, Institute of Biology, PSL Research University, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France;
3 Université Paris 6, Paris, France;
4 Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France;
5 Cambridge University DAMTP and Churchill College, CB3 0DS, Cambridge, UK.
Present address: Computer Science Division, University of California, CA 94720, USA

Corresponding author: 
Abstract: 

Ionic homeostasis in the brain involves redistribution of ionic fluxes in several cell types and compartments, including neurons, astrocytes and the extracellular space. How the major ionic activity-dependent fluxes of potassium and sodium are individually regulated remains difficult to dissociate and to track experimentally. We here review recent progress in modeling the ionic fluxes evoked by neuronal activity based on mass conservation. Excitability of neurons indeed relies on inward sodium and outward potassium fluxes during action potential firing. Recently, we have developed a tri-compartment model based on mass-action kinetics equations that account for potassium dynamics between neurons, astrocytes and the extracellular space. This review describes how such type of model can be used to spatially and temporally predict potassium fluxes during various regimes of neuronal activity. In particular, the model initially showed that it takes several seconds for astrocytes to buffer the majority of the potassium rapidly released by neurons in both basal and high regime of activity. Such model can also probe the selective contribution of ionic channels, and revealed for instance that disruption of the main astroglial potassium Kir4.1 channels not only favors the emergence of epileptiform activity, but also dysregulates neuronal excitability specifically during slow rhythmic activities. We here also extend the predictions of the model by assessing the selective contribution of the astroglial and neuronal Na/K ATPase, or volume of the extracellular space on potassium dynamics. We discuss these findings and their implications for neuronal information processing in the healthy and diseased brain.