Abstract

Somatic integration of synaptic inputs relies on the propagation of currents arising from sources across the dendritic tree. Whilst active processes strongly contribute to current flow in most neurons, understanding the passive backbone to transmission allows a better intuitive grasp of dendritic function; the results of Rall in highlighting the properties of cylindrical dendrites[1] are of foundational importance in compartmental modelling and computational neuroscience. Dendrites are, however, not generally cylindrical, they tend to taper in a way that contributes to the normalisation of input currents towards the soma[2]. We have derived an asymptotic approximation to the voltage in dendrites with an arbitrary taper profile using the insight that voltage attenuation is substantially faster than radius change in realistic morphologies (Figure ​(Figure1A).1A). This result allows faster computation and greater insight than standard approaches using large numbers of cylinders or frusta to numerically compute voltage profiles. In addition, it provides easy generalisations of the standard results of cable theory involving transients and branches. Figure 1 Asymptotic approximations reveal fundamental properties of voltage flow in tapering dendrites. A Comparison of numerical (blue) and first-order asymptotic (black dashed) methods for determining the steady-state voltage in a quadratically tapering dendritic ... A particularly interesting implication of these results is that the optimal taper profile to proximally transmit maximum voltages can be found by variational calculus, matching results from non-parametric numerical optimisation which predicted a quadratic form for the diameter taper (Figure ​(Figure1B)1B) [3].

Highlights

  • Somatic integration of synaptic inputs relies on the propagation of currents arising from sources across the dendritic tree

  • We have derived an asymptotic approximation to the voltage in dendrites with an arbitrary taper profile using the insight that voltage attenuation is substantially faster than radius change in realistic morphologies (Figure 1A)

  • A interesting implication of these results is that the optimal taper profile to proximally transmit maximum voltages can be found by variational calculus, matching results from non-parametric numerical optimisation which predicted a quadratic form for the diameter taper (Figure 1B) [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Somatic integration of synaptic inputs relies on the propagation of currents arising from sources across the dendritic tree. Whilst active processes strongly contribute to current flow in most neurons, understanding the passive backbone to transmission allows a better intuitive grasp of dendritic function; the results of Rall in highlighting the properties of cylindrical dendrites [1] are of foundational importance in compartmental modelling and computational neuroscience.

Results
Conclusion

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