Determinants of Voltage Attenuation in Neocortical Pyramidal Neuron Dendrites
0301 basic medicine
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Pyramidal Cells
Models, Neurological
Electric Conductivity
Cesium
Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials
Neocortex
Dendrites
Membrane Potentials
Rats
03 medical and health sciences
Chlorides
Electric Impedance
Animals
Computer Simulation
Rats, Wistar
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.18-10-03501.1998
Publication Date:
2018-04-03T15:06:01Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
How effectively synaptic and regenerative potentials propagate within neurons depends critically on the membrane properties and intracellular resistivity of the dendritic tree. These properties therefore are important determinants of neuronal function. Here we use simultaneous whole-cell patch-pipette recordings from the soma and apical dendrite of neocortical layer 5 pyramidal neurons to directly measure voltage attenuation in cortical neurons. When combined with morphologically realistic compartmental models of the same cells, the data suggest that the intracellular resistivity of neocortical pyramidal neurons is relatively low (∼70 to 100 Ωcm), but that voltage attenuation is substantial because of nonuniformly distributed resting conductances present at a higher density in the distal apical dendrites. These conductances, which were largely blocked by bath application of CsCl (5 mm), significantly increased steady-state voltage attenuation and decreased EPSP integral and peak in a manner that depended on the location of the synapse. Together these findings suggest that nonuniformly distributed Cs-sensitive and -insensitive resting conductances generate a “leaky” apical dendrite, which differentially influences the integration of spatially segregated synaptic inputs.
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