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Biophysical Journal 31: 293-297 (1980)
© 1980 the Biophysical Society
ABSTRACT
Accommodation may be defined as an increase in the threshold of an excitable membrane when the membrane is subjected to a sustained subthreshold depolarizing stimulus. Some excitable membranes show accommodation in response to currents which rise linearly at a very slow rate. In this report we point out a theoretical and an experimental counterexample, i.e., a nerve model and an axon which do not accommodate. The nerve model is the standard Hodgkin-Huxley axon, which Hodgkin and Huxley expected not to be excited by a very slowly rising current. This expectation is often quoted as fact, in spite of contrary calculations which we confirm. We have found that squid axons in seawater with reduced divalent cation concentration also do not accommodate to slowly rising currents.
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T. D. Sangrey, W. O. Friesen, and W. B Levy Analysis of the Optimal Channel Density of the Squid Giant Axon Using a Reparameterized Hodgkin-Huxley Model J Neurophysiol, June 1, 2004; 91(6): 2541 - 2550. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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