Chklovskii Dmitri B, Schikorski Thomas, Stevens Charles F
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, USA.
Neuron. 2002 Apr 25;34(3):341-7. doi: 10.1016/s0896-6273(02)00679-7.
Wiring a brain presents a formidable problem because neural circuits require an enormous number of fast and durable connections. We propose that evolution was likely to have optimized neural circuits to minimize conduction delays in axons, passive cable attenuation in dendrites, and the length of "wire" used to construct circuits, and to have maximized the density of synapses. Here we ask the question: "What fraction of the volume should be taken up by axons and dendrites (i.e., wire) when these variables are at their optimal values?" The biophysical properties of axons and dendrites dictate that wire should occupy 3/5 of the volume in an optimally wired gray matter. We have measured the fraction of the volume occupied by each cellular component and find that the volume of wire is close to the predicted optimal value.
连接大脑是一个极具挑战性的问题,因为神经回路需要大量快速且持久的连接。我们提出,进化可能已经优化了神经回路,以尽量减少轴突中的传导延迟、树突中的被动电缆衰减以及构建回路所需的“导线”长度,并最大化突触密度。在这里,我们提出一个问题:“当这些变量处于最优值时,轴突和树突(即导线)应占据多大比例的体积?”轴突和树突的生物物理特性表明,在最优布线的灰质中,导线应占据3/5的体积。我们测量了每个细胞成分所占的体积比例,发现导线的体积接近预测的最优值。