Abstract

Neocortical neurons spontaneously fire action potentials during active network states; how are dendritic synaptic inputs integrated into the ongoing action potential output pattern of neurons? Here, the efficacy of barrages of simulated EPSPs generated at known dendritic sites on the rate and pattern of ongoing action potential firing is determined using multisite whole-cell recording techniques from rat layer 5 neocortical pyramidal neurons in vitro. Under quiescent conditions, the somatic impact of proximal (253 +/- 15 microm from soma; n = 28) dendritic barrages of simulated EPSPs was 4.7-fold greater than identical barrages of EPSPs generated from distal (572 +/- 13 microm from soma) sites. In contrast, barrages of proximal simulated EPSPs enhanced the rate of ongoing action potential firing, evoked by somatic simulated EPSPs, by only 1.6-fold more than distal simulated EPSPs. This relationship was apparent across a wide frequency range of action potential firing (6-22 Hz) and dendritic excitation (100-500 Hz). The efficacy of distal dendritic EPSPs was formed by the recruitment of active dendritic processes that transformed the ongoing action potential firing pattern, promoting action potential burst firing. Paired recordings (n = 42) revealed that patterns of action potential firing generated by concerted somatic and distal dendritic excitation reliably and powerfully drove postsynaptic excitation as a result of enhanced reliability of transmitter release during bursts of action potential firing. During active states, therefore, distal excitatory synaptic inputs decisively control the excitatory synaptic output of layer 5 neocortical pyramidal neurons and so powerfully influence network activity in the neocortex.

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