Neuroscience
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N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor-mediated ( spikes can be causally linked to the induction of synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) in hippocampal and cortical pyramidal cells. However, it is unclear if they regulate plasticity at a local or global scale in the dendritic tree. ⋯ We show that local hyperpolarization of a single dendritic segment prevents NMDA spikes, their associated calcium transients, as well as LTP in a branch-specific manner. This result provides direct, causal evidence that the single dendritic branch can operate as a functional unit in regulating CA3 pyramidal cell plasticity.
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BrainScaleS-2 is an accelerated and highly configurable neuromorphic system with physical models of neurons and synapses. Beyond networks of spiking point neurons, it allows for the implementation of user-defined neuron morphologies. Both passive propagation of electric signals between compartments as well as dendritic spikes and plateau potentials can be emulated. In this paper, three multi-compartment neuron morphologies are chosen to demonstrate passive propagation of postsynaptic potentials, spatio-temporal coincidence detection of synaptic inputs in a dendritic branch, and the replication of the BAC burst firing mechanism found in layer 5 pyramidal neurons of the neocortex.
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Microtubules deliver essential resources to and from synapses. Three-dimensional reconstructions in rat hippocampus reveal a sampling bias regarding spine density that needs to be controlled for dendrite caliber and resource delivery based on microtubule number. The strength of this relationship varies across dendritic arbors, as illustrated for area CA1 and dentate gyrus. ⋯ Prior work showed that dendritic segments with the same number of microtubules had elevated resources in subregions of their dendritic shafts where spine synapses had enlarged, and spine clusters had formed. Thus, additional microtubules were not required for redistribution of resources locally to growing spines or synapses. These results provide new understanding about the potential for microtubules to regulate resource delivery to and from dendritic branches and locally among dendritic spines.
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The whole-cell voltage clamp technique is commonly used to estimate synaptic conductances. While previous work has shown how these estimates are affected by series resistance and space clamp errors during isolated synaptic events, how voltage clamp errors impact on synaptic conductance estimates during concurrent excitation and inhibition is less clear. This issue is particularly relevant given that many studies now use the whole-cell voltage clamp technique to estimate synaptic conductances in vivo, where both excitation and inhibition are intact. ⋯ Interactions between unclamped dendritic excitatory and inhibitory conductances also introduce correlations when the actual conductances are uncorrelated, as well as distortions in the time course of estimated excitatory and inhibitory conductances. Finally, we show that space clamp errors are exacerbated by the inclusion of dendritic voltage-activated conductances. In summary, we highlight issues with the interpretation of synaptic conductance estimates obtained using somatic whole-cell voltage clamp during concurrent excitatory and inhibitory input to neurons with dendrites.
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Acetylcholine has been proposed to facilitate the formation of memory ensembles within the hippocampal CA3 network, by enhancing plasticity at CA3-CA3 recurrent synapses. Regenerative NMDA receptor (NMDAR) activation in CA3 neuron dendrites (NMDA spikes) increase synaptic Ca2+ influx and can trigger this synaptic plasticity. Acetylcholine inhibits potassium channels which enhances dendritic excitability and therefore could facilitate NMDA spike generation. ⋯ Simulating acetylcholine by blocking potassium channels (M-type, A-type, Ca2+-activated, and inwardly-rectifying) increased dendritic excitability and reduced the number of synapses required to generate NMDA spikes, particularly in the SR dendrites. The magnitude of this effect was heterogeneous across different dendritic branches within the same neuron. These results predict that acetylcholine facilitates dendritic integration and NMDA spike generation in selected CA3 dendrites which could strengthen connections between specific CA3 neurons to form memory ensembles.