Abstract
Spreading depolarization (SD) is a slow-moving wave of neuronal depolarization accompanied by a breakdown of ion concentration homeostasis, followed by long periods of neuronal silence (spreading depression), and associated with several neurological conditions. We developed multiscale (ions to tissue slice) computer models of SD in brain slices using the NEURON simulator: 36,000 neurons (2 voltage-gated ion channels; 3 leak channels; 3 ion exchangers/pumps) in the extracellular space (ECS) of a slice (1 mm sides, varying thickness) with ion (K+, Cl−, Na+) and O2 diffusion and equilibration with a surrounding bath. Glia and neurons cleared K+ from the ECS via Na+/K+ pumps. SD propagated through the slices at realistic speeds of 2–4 mm/min, which increased by as much as 50% in models incorporating the effects of hypoxia or propionate. In both cases, the speedup was mediated principally by ECS shrinkage. Our model allows us to make testable predictions, including: 1. SD can be inhibited by enlarging ECS volume; 2. SD velocity will be greater in areas with greater neuronal density, total neuronal volume, or larger/more dendrites; 3. SD is all-or-none: initiating K+ bolus properties have little impact on SD speed; 4. Slice thickness influences SD due to relative hypoxia in the slice core, exacerbated by SD in a pathological cycle; 5. SD and high neuronal spike rates will be observed in the core of the slice. Cells in the periphery of the slice near an oxygenated bath will resist SD.
Significance Spreading depolarization (SD) is a slow moving wave of electrical and ionic imbalances in brain tissue and is a hallmark of several neurological disorders. We developed a multiscale computer model of brain slices with realistic neuronal densities, ions, and oxygenation. Our model shows that SD is exacerbated by and causes hypoxia, resulting in strong SD dependence on slice thickness. Our model also predicts that the velocity of SD propagation is not dependent on its initiation, but instead on tissue properties, including the amount of extracellular space and the total area of neuronal membrane, suggesting faster SD following ischemic stroke or traumatic brain injury.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Conflict of interest statement: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
We have updated our manuscript to reflect more realistic simulations of SD in hypoxic slices, clarify the role of oxygen and Na/K pumps in the model, and include new results from simulations of hypoxic SD-like depolarization.