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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00183.2002
Submitted on 11 March 2002
Accepted on 5 August 2002
1Departamento de Investigación, Hospital Ramón y Cajal and 2Departamento de Ingeniería Informática, Universidad Autónoma, Madrid 28034, Spain
López-Aguado, L.,
J. M. Ibarz,
P. Varona, and
O. Herreras.
Structural Inhomogeneities Differentially Modulate Action
Currents and Population Spikes Initiated in the Axon or
Dendrites. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2809-2820, 2002. Action potentials (APs) in CA1 pyramidal cells propagate in
different directions along the somatodendritic axis depending on the
activation mode (synaptic or axonal). We studied how the geometrical
inhomogeneities along the apical shaft, soma, and initial axon modulate
the transmembrane current (Im) flow
underlying APs, using model and experimental techniques. The
computations obtained at the subcellular level during forward- and
backpropagation were extrapolated to macroscopic level (field
potentials) and compared with the basic in vivo features of the ortho-
and antidromic population spike (PS) that reflects the sum total of all
elementary currents from synchronously firing cells. The matching of
theoretical and experimental results supports the following
conclusions. Because the charge carried by axonal APs is almost
entirely drained into dendrites, the soma invasion is preceded by
little capacitive currents (Icap), the
ionic currents (Iion) dominating
Im and the depolarizing phase. The
subsequent invasion of the tapering apical shaft is preceded, however,
by significant Icap, while
Iion decayed gradually. A similar
pattern occurred during backpropagation of spikes synaptically
initiated in the axon. On the contrary, when the AP was apically
initiated, the dendritic Iion was
boosted by the apical flare, it was preceded by weak
Icap and spread forwardly at a slower
velocity. Soma invasion is reliable once the AP reached the main apical
shaft but less so distal to the primary bifurcation, where it may be
upheld by concurrent synaptic activity. The decreasing internal
resistance of the apical shaft guided most axial current into the soma,
causing its fast charging. There, Iion
began later in the depolarizing phase of the AP and the reduced driving
force made it smaller. This, in addition to a poor temporal overlapping of somatodendritic inward currents within individual cells, built a
smaller extracellular sink, i.e., a smaller PS. In both experiment and
model, the antidromic (axon-initiated) PS in the soma layer is
approximately 30% larger than an orthodromic (apical shaft-initiated) PS contributed by the same number of firing cells. We conclude that the
dominance of capacitive or ionic current components on Im is a distinguishing feature of
forward and backward APs that is predictable from the geometric
inhomogeneities between conducting subregions. Correspondingly,
experimental and model APs have a faster rising slope during ortho than
antidromic activation. The moderate flare of the apical shaft makes
forward AP conduction quite safe. This alternative trigger zone enables
two different processing modes for apical inputs.
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