Abstract

The output of neocortical layer 5 pyramidal cells (L5PCs) is expressed by a train of single spikes with intermittent bursts of multiple spikes at high frequencies. The bursts are the result of nonlinear dendritic properties, including Na+, Ca2+, and NMDA spikes, that interact with the ~10,000 synapses impinging on the neuron’s dendrites. Output spike bursts are thought to implement key dendritic computations, such as coincidence detection of bottom-up inputs (arriving mostly at the basal tree) and top-down inputs (arriving mostly at the apical tree). In this study we used a detailed nonlinear model of L5PC receiving excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs to explore the conditions for generating bursts and for modulating their properties. We established the excitatory input conditions on the basal versus the apical tree that favor burst and show that there are two distinct types of bursts. Bursts consisting of 3 or more spikes firing at < 200 Hz, which are generated by stronger excitatory input to the basal versus the apical tree, and bursts of ~2-spikes at ~250 Hz, generated by prominent apical tuft excitation. Localized and well-timed dendritic inhibition on the apical tree differentially modulates Na+, Ca2+, and NMDA spikes and, consequently, finely controls the burst output. Finally, we explored the implications of different burst classes and respective dendritic inhibition for regulating synaptic plasticity.

Highlights

  • Layer 5 pyramidal cells (L5PCs) are considered to be pivotal building blocks of the mammalian neocortex [1]

  • Using experimentally constrained computational modelling we determined the conditions of synaptic activation patterns that induce burst firing in these cells

  • We found two distinct classes of bursts. They are distinguished by the number of active synapses, on either basal or apical part of the dendritic tree, required for burst initiation, and by the number and frequency of output spikes

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Summary

Introduction

Layer 5 pyramidal cells (L5PCs) are considered to be pivotal building blocks of the mammalian neocortex [1]. In rodents, these cells receive ~10,000 synaptic inputs over their dendritic surface, about 20% of them originate from the local microcircuit and the rest from external structures. Thick-tufted L5b PCs project uniquely to subcortical regions (e.g., the thalamus) [5,6]. Their key importance in processing information was already realized more than 100 years ago by Ramon y Cajal (1894) [7], who termed cortical pyramidal cells “psychic” neurons

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