Coupled Biomechanical and Ionic Excitability in Developing Neural Cell Networks

Author:

Gates Sylvester J.,Alvarez Phillip,Cao Kan,O’Neill KateORCID,Losert Wolfgang

Abstract

AbstractWaves and oscillations play a key role in the flow and processing of information in the brain. Recent work has demonstrated that in addition to electrical activity, biomechanical signaling can also be excitable and thus capable of self-sustaining oscillations and waves. Here we measured the biomechanical dynamics of actin polymerization in neural precursor cells throughout their differentiation into populations of neurons and astrocytes. Fluorescence-based live-cell imaging allowed us to analyze the dynamics of actin in conjunction with the dynamics of calcium signals. Actin dynamics throughout differentiation showed a rhythmic character, localized mostly in processes, with changes in scale associated with differentiation. Furthermore, actin dynamics impact ionic dynamics, with an increase in the frequency of calcium bursts accompanied by a decrease in cell-cell correlations when actin dynamics is inhibited. This impact of cytoskeletal dynamics on cell-cell coupling and ionic neural cell signaling suggests that information flow in the brain may be able to harness both biomechanical and electrical/ionic excitability.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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