Signal Transfer in Passive Dendrites with Nonuniform Membrane Conductance
Open Access
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 19 (19) , 8219-8233
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.19-19-08219.1999
Abstract
In recent years it became clear that dendrites possess a host of ion channels that may be distributed nonuniformly over their membrane surface. In cortical pyramids, for example, it was demonstrated that the resting membrane conductance Gm(x) is higher (the membrane is “leakier”) at distal dendritic regions than at more proximal sites. How does this spatial nonuniformity in Gm(x) affect the input–output function of the neuron? The present study aims at providing basic insights into this question. To this end, we have analytically studied the fundamental effects of membrane non-uniformity in passive cable structures.Keeping the total membrane conductance over a given modeled structure fixed (i.e., a constant number of passive ion channels), the classical case of cables with uniform membrane conductance is contrasted with various nonuniform cases with the following general conclusions. (1) For cylindrical cables with “sealed ends,” monotonic increase in Gm(x) improves voltage transfer from the input location to the soma. The steeper the Gm(x), the larger the improvement. (2) This effect is further enhanced when the stimulation is distal and consists of a synaptic input rather than a current source. (3) Any nonuniformity in Gm(x) decreases the electrotonic length, L, of the cylinder. (4) The system time constant τ0is larger in the nonuniform case than in the corresponding uniform case. (5) When voltage transients relax with τ0, the dendritic tree is not isopotential in the nonuniform case, at variance with the uniform case. The effect of membrane nonuniformity on signal transfer in reconstructed dendritic trees and on the I/f relation of the neuron is also considered, and experimental methods for assessing membrane nonuniformity in dendrites are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 74 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of dendritic structure on firing pattern in model neocortical neuronsNature, 1996
- Amplification of high-frequency synaptic inputs by active dendritic membrane processesNature, 1996
- Mechanism for a sliding synaptic modification thresholdNeuron, 1995
- Information Processing in Dendritic TreesNeural Computation, 1994
- Initiation and spread of sodium action potentials in cerebellar purkinje cellsNeuron, 1994
- The Impact of Parallel Fiber Background Activity on the Cable Properties of Cerebellar Purkinje CellsNeural Computation, 1992
- A non-uniform equivalent cable model of membrane voltage changes in a passive dendritic treeJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1989
- Membrane Voltage Changes in Passive Dendritic Trees: A Tapering Equivalent Cylinder ModelMathematical Medicine and Biology: A Journal of the IMA, 1988
- Synaptic amplification by active membrane in dendritic spinesBrain Research, 1985
- Cable properties of a neuron model with non-uniform membrane resistivityJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1984