Abstract

Firing rate variability at the single neuron level is characterized by long-memory processes and complex statistics over a wide range of time scales (from milliseconds up to several hours). Here, we focus on the contribution of non-stationary efficacy of the ensemble of synapses–activated in response to a given stimulus–on single neuron response variability. We present and validate a method tailored for controlled and specific long-term activation of a single cortical neuron in vitro via synaptic or antidromic stimulation, enabling a clear separation between two determinants of neuronal response variability: membrane excitability dynamics vs. synaptic dynamics. Applying this method we show that, within the range of physiological activation frequencies, the synaptic ensemble of a given neuron is a key contributor to the neuronal response variability, long-memory processes and complex statistics observed over extended time scales. Synaptic transmission dynamics impact on response variability in stimulation rates that are substantially lower compared to stimulation rates that drive excitability resources to fluctuate. Implications to network embedded neurons are discussed.

Highlights

  • Ongoing single neuron electrical activity shows significant fluctuations over extended time scales

  • The second source of complexity arises from kinetics of ionic channels underlying excitability at the single neuron level; over extended time scales these kinetics are dominated by long-lasting states, giving rise to complex firing statistics and long-memory processes (Toib et al, 1998; Marom, 2009; Gal et al, 2010; Gal and Marom, 2013, 2014)

  • The second section describes the use of this method in characterization of long-term fluctuations of synaptically evoked responses at the single neuron level, estimating the contribution of synaptic dynamics to these fluctuations

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Ongoing single neuron electrical activity shows significant fluctuations over extended time scales (from milliseconds up to several hours). Whenever data recording is sufficiently prolonged to enable a proper analysis of extended time scales, complex statistics of the spike time series emerges They typically exhibit signatures of what statisticians define as “long-memory processes,” reflected in long range temporal correlations and seemingly unbounded spectral density at low frequencies (Baillie, 1996). We study the contribution of synaptic dynamics to the temporal complexity of the neuronal response over extended time scales To this aim, we have developed means to activate single neurons in vitro through a synaptic population, while suppressing ongoing activity from the surrounding network. Synaptic contribution to response fluctuations ensemble is a key determinant of long-term temporal statistics of neuronal response

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
IMPACT OF SYNAPTIC DYNAMICS ON LONG-TERM RESPONSE FLUCTUATIONS
DISCUSSION
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