Neuron
Volume 69, Issue 5, 10 March 2011, Pages 885-892
Journal home page for Neuron

Report
Synaptic Integration Gradients in Single Cortical Pyramidal Cell Dendrites

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2011.02.006Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

Cortical pyramidal neurons receive thousands of synaptic inputs arriving at different dendritic locations with varying degrees of temporal synchrony. It is not known if different locations along single cortical dendrites integrate excitatory inputs in different ways. Here we have used two-photon glutamate uncaging and compartmental modeling to reveal a gradient of nonlinear synaptic integration in basal and apical oblique dendrites of cortical pyramidal neurons. Excitatory inputs to the proximal dendrite sum linearly and require precise temporal coincidence for effective summation, whereas distal inputs are amplified with high gain and integrated over broader time windows. This allows distal inputs to overcome their electrotonic disadvantage, and become surprisingly more effective than proximal inputs at influencing action potential output. Thus, single dendritic branches can already exhibit nonuniform synaptic integration, with the computational strategy shifting from temporal coding to rate coding along the dendrite.

Highlights

► Single cortical dendrites exhibit a gradient of nonlinear synaptic integration ► Input gain and temporal summation increase from proximal to distal locations ► Distal inputs can exert more influence on action AP output than proximal inputs ► Proximal inputs are more suited for temporal coding and distal inputs for rate coding

Cited by (0)