dendspikes2017

Abstract

Dendritic sodium spikes endow neurons with inverse firing rate response to correlated synaptic activity.
Tomasz Gorski, Romain Veltz, Mathieu Galtier, Helissande Fragnaud, Jennifer S. Goldman, Bartosz Telenczuk and Alain Destexhe.

J. Computational Neurosci. 45: 223-224, 2018.

Copy of the full paper (PDF)
Abstract
Many neurons possess dendrites enriched with sodium channels and are capable of generating action potentials. However, the role of dendritic sodium spikes remain unclear. Here, we study computational models of neurons to investigate the functional effects of dendritic spikes. In agreement with previous studies, we found that point neurons or neurons with passive dendrites increase their somatic firing rate in response to the correlation of synaptic bombardment for a wide range of input conditions, i.e. input firing rates, synaptic conductances or refractory periods. However, neurons with active dendrites show the opposite behavior: for a wide range of conditions the firing rate decreases as a function of correlation. We found this property in three types of models of dendritic excitability: a Hodgkin-Huxley model of dendritic spikes, a model with integrate-and-fire dendrites, and a discrete-state dendritic model. We conclude that neurons equipped with with fast dendritic spikes confer much broader computational properties to neurons, sometimes opposite to that of point neurons.