Dendritic excitations govern back-propagation via a spike-rate accelerometer

Pojeong Park, J. David Wong-Campos,Daniel Itkis, Byung Hun Lee,Yitong Qi,Hunter C. Davis, Benjamin Antin, Amol Praveen Pasarkar,Jonathan B. Grimm, Sarah E. Plutkis, Katie L. Holland, Liam Paninski,Luke Lavis,Adam Ezra Cohen

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
Dendrites on neurons support nonlinear electrical excitations, but the computational significance of these events is not well understood. We developed molecular, optical, and analytical tools to map sub-millisecond voltage dynamics throughout the dendritic trees of CA1 pyramidal neurons under diverse optogenetic and synaptic stimulus patterns, in acute brain slices. We observed history-dependent spike back-propagation in distal dendrites, driven by locally generated Na+ spikes (dSpikes). Dendritic depolarization created a transient window for dSpike propagation, opened by A-type KV channel inactivation, and closed by slow NaV inactivation. Collisions of dSpikes with synaptic inputs triggered calcium channel and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR)-dependent plateau potentials, with accompanying complex spikes at the soma. This hierarchical ion channel network acts as a spike-rate accelerometer, providing an intuitive picture of how dendritic excitations shape associative plasticity rules. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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