Dendritic axon origin enables information gating by perisomatic inhibition in pyramidal neurons
Author(s) -
Alexander Hodapp,
Martin E. Kaiser,
Christian Thome,
Lingjun Ding,
Andrei Rozov,
Matthias Klumpp,
Nikolas Andreas Stevens,
Moritz Stingl,
Tina Sackmann,
Nadja Lehmann,
Andreas Draguhn,
Andrea Burgalossi,
Maren Engelhardt,
Martin Both
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.abj1861
Subject(s) - soma , neuroscience , axon , dendrite (mathematics) , hippocampal formation , dendritic spike , synapse , gating , ripple , neuron , biology , excitatory postsynaptic potential , apical dendrite , electrophysiology , pyramidal cell , inhibitory postsynaptic potential , physics , geometry , mathematics , quantum mechanics , voltage
Information processing in neuronal networks involves the recruitment of selected neurons into coordinated spatiotemporal activity patterns. This sparse activation results from widespread synaptic inhibition in conjunction with neuron-specific synaptic excitation. We report the selective recruitment of hippocampal pyramidal cells into patterned network activity. During ripple oscillations in awake mice, spiking is much more likely in cells in which the axon originates from a basal dendrite rather than from the soma. High-resolution recordings in vitro and computer modeling indicate that these spikes are elicited by synaptic input to the axon-carrying dendrite and thus escape perisomatic inhibition. Pyramidal cells with somatic axon origin can be activated during ripple oscillations by blocking their somatic inhibition. The recruitment of neurons into active ensembles is thus determined by axonal morphological features.
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