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Sensitivity of coherent oscillations in rat hippocampus to AC electric fields
Author(s) -
Deans Jacqueline K.,
Powell Andrew D.,
Jefferys John G. R.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.137711
Subject(s) - physics , electric field , membrane potential , oscillation (cell signaling) , nuclear magnetic resonance , noise (video) , sensitivity (control systems) , atomic physics , biophysics , chemistry , biology , quantum mechanics , electronic engineering , biochemistry , artificial intelligence , computer science , engineering , image (mathematics)
The sensitivity of brain tissue to weak extracellular electric fields is important in assessing potential public health risks of extremely low frequency (ELF) fields, and potential roles of endogenous fields in brain function. Here we determine the effect of applied electric fields on membrane potentials and coherent network oscillations. Applied DC electric fields change transmembrane potentials in CA3 pyramidal cell somata by 0.18 mV per V m −1 applied. AC sinusoidal electric fields have smaller effects on transmembrane potentials: sensitivity drops as an exponential decay function of frequency. At 50 and 60 Hz it is ∼0.4 that for DC fields. Effects of fields of ≤ 16 V m −1 peak‐to‐peak (p‐p) did not outlast application. Kainic acid (100 n m ) induced coherent network oscillations in the beta and gamma bands (15–100 Hz). Applied fields of ≥ 6 V m −1 p‐p (2.1 V m −1 r.m.s.) shifted the gamma peak in the power spectrum to centre on the applied field frequency or a subharmonic. Statistically significant effects on the timing of pyramidal cell firing within the oscillation appeared at distinct thresholds: at 50 Hz, 1 V m −1 p‐p (354 mV m −1 r.m.s.) had statistically significant effects in 71% of slices, and 0.5 V m −1 p‐p (177 mV m −1 r.m.s.) in 20%. These threshold fields are consistent with current environmental guidelines. They correspond to changes in somatic potential of ∼70 μV, below membrane potential noise levels for neurons, demonstrating the emergent properties of neuronal networks can be more sensitive than measurable effects in single neurons.

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