Hô N, Destexhe A
Department of Physiology, Laval University, Quebec G1K 7P4, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2000 Sep;84(3):1488-96. doi: 10.1152/jn.2000.84.3.1488.
Neocortical pyramidal neurons in vivo are subject to an intense synaptic background activity but little is known of how this activity affects cellular responsiveness and what function it may serve. These issues were examined in morphologically reconstructed neocortical pyramidal neurons in which synaptic background activity was simulated based on recent measurements in cat parietal cortex. We show that background activity can be decomposed into two components: a tonically active conductance and voltage fluctuations. Previous studies have mostly focused on the conductance effect, revealing that background activity is responsible for a decrease in responsiveness, which imposes severe conditions of coincidence of inputs necessary to discharge the cell. It is shown here, in contrast, that responsiveness is enhanced if voltage fluctuations are taken into account; in this case the model can produce responses to inputs that would normally be subthreshold. This effect is analyzed by dissecting and comparing the different components of background activity, as well as by evaluating the contribution of parameters such as the dendritic morphology, the distribution of leak currents, the value of axial resistivity, the densities of voltage-dependent currents, and the release parameters underlying background activity. Interestingly, the model's optimal responsiveness was obtained when voltage fluctuations were of the same order as those measured intracellularly in vivo. Possible consequences were also investigated at the population level, where the presence of background activity allowed networks of pyramidal neurons to instantaneously detect inputs that are small compared with the classical detection threshold. These results suggest, at the single-cell level, that the presence of voltage fluctuations has a determining influence on cellular responsiveness and that these should be taken into account in models of background activity. At the network level, we predict that background activity provides the necessary drive for detecting events that would normally be undetectable. Experiments are suggested to explore this possible functional role for background activity.
体内新皮层锥体神经元会受到强烈的突触背景活动影响,但对于这种活动如何影响细胞反应性以及它可能发挥什么功能却知之甚少。我们在形态学重建的新皮层锥体神经元中研究了这些问题,其中基于最近在猫顶叶皮层的测量结果模拟了突触背景活动。我们发现背景活动可以分解为两个成分:一个持续活跃的电导和电压波动。先前的研究大多集中在电导效应上,揭示出背景活动会导致反应性降低,这给细胞放电所需的输入信号重合带来了严苛条件。相比之下,本文表明,如果考虑电压波动,反应性会增强;在这种情况下,模型能够对通常低于阈值的输入产生反应。通过剖析和比较背景活动的不同成分,以及评估诸如树突形态、漏电电流分布、轴向电阻率值、电压依赖性电流密度和背景活动背后的释放参数等参数的贡献,对这种效应进行了分析。有趣的是,当电压波动与体内细胞内测量的波动处于同一量级时,模型获得了最佳反应性。我们还在群体水平上研究了可能的后果,在该水平上,背景活动的存在使锥体神经元网络能够瞬间检测到与经典检测阈值相比很小的输入信号。这些结果表明,在单细胞水平上,电压波动的存在对细胞反应性具有决定性影响,并且在背景活动模型中应考虑这些波动。在网络水平上,我们预测背景活动为检测通常无法检测到的事件提供了必要的驱动力。建议开展实验来探索背景活动这种可能的功能作用。