scholarly journals Conditional Spike Backpropagation Generates Burst Discharge in a Sensory Neuron

2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 1519-1530 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Lemon ◽  
R. W. Turner

Backpropagating dendritic Na+spikes generate a depolarizing afterpotential (DAP) at the soma of pyramidal cells in the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of weakly electric fish. Repetitive spike discharge is associated with a progressive depolarizing shift in somatic spike afterpotentials that eventually triggers a high-frequency spike doublet and subsequent burst afterhyperpolarization (bAHP). The rhythmic generation of a spike doublet and bAHP groups spike discharge into an oscillatory burst pattern. This study examined the soma-dendritic mechanisms controlling the depolarizing shift in somatic spike afterpotentials, and the mechanism by which spike doublets terminate spike discharge. Intracellular recordings were obtained from ELL pyramidal somata and apical dendrites in an in vitro slice preparation. The pattern of spike discharge was equivalent in somatic and dendritic regions, reflecting the backpropagation of spikes from soma to dendrites. There was a clear frequency-dependent threshold in the transition from tonic to burst discharge, with bursts initiated when interspike intervals fell between ∼3–7 ms. Removal of all backpropagating spikes by dendritic TTX ejection revealed that the isolated somatic AHPs were entirely stable at the interspike intervals that generated burst discharge. As such, the depolarizing membrane potential shift during repetitive discharge could be attributed to a potentiation of DAP amplitude. Potentiation of the DAP was due to a frequency-dependent broadening and temporal summation of backpropagating dendritic Na+ spikes. Spike doublets were generated with an interspike interval close to, but not within, the somatic spike refractory period. In contrast, the interspike interval of spike doublets always fell within the longer dendritic refractory period, preventing backpropagation of the second spike of the doublet. The dendritic depolarization was thus abruptly removed from one spike to the next, allowing the burst to terminate when the bAHP hyperpolarized the membrane. The transition from tonic to burst discharge was dependent on the number and frequency of spikes invoking dendritic spike summation, indicating that burst threshold depends on the immediate history of cell discharge. Spike frequency thus represents an important condition that determines the success of dendritic spike invasion, establishing an intrinsic mechanism by which backpropagating spikes can be used to generate a rhythmic burst output.

2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 324-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brent Doiron ◽  
Liza Noonan ◽  
Neal Lemon ◽  
Ray W. Turner

The estimation and detection of stimuli by sensory neurons is affected by factors that govern a transition from tonic to burst mode and the frequency chracteristics of burst output. Pyramidal cells in the electrosensory lobe of weakly electric fish generate spike bursts for the purpose of stimulus detection. Spike bursts are generated during repetitive discharge when a frequency-dependent broadening of dendritic spikes increases current flow from dendrite to soma to potentiate a somatic depolarizing afterpotential (DAP). The DAP eventually triggers a somatic spike doublet with an interspike interval that falls inside the dendritic refractory period, blocking spike backpropagiation and the DAP. Repetition of this process gives rise to a rhythmic dendritic spike failure, termed conditional backpropagation, that converts cell output from tonic to burst discharge. Through in vitrorecordings and compartmental modeling we show that burst frequency is regulated by the rate of DAP potentiation during a burst, which determines the time required to discharge the spike doublet that blocks backpropagation. DAP potentiation is maginfied through a postitve feedback process when an increase in dendritic spike duration activates persistent sodium current ( I NaP). I NaP further promotes a slow depolarization that induces a shift from tonic to burst discharge over time. The results are consistent with a dynamical systems analysis that shows that the threshold separating tonic and burst discharge can be represented as a saddle-node bifurcation. The interaction between dendritic K+ current and I NaP provides a physiological explanation for a variable time scale of bursting dynamics characteristic of such a bifurcation.


1999 ◽  
Vol 202 (10) ◽  
pp. 1255-1265 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.W. Turner ◽  
L. Maler

Oscillatory and burst discharge is recognized as a key element of signal processing from the level of receptor to cortical output cells in most sensory systems. The relevance of this activity for electrosensory processing has become increasingly apparent for cells in the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of gymnotiform weakly electric fish. Burst discharge by ELL pyramidal cells can be recorded in vivo and has been directly associated with feature extraction of electrosensory input. In vivo recordings have also shown that pyramidal cells are differentially tuned to the frequency of amplitude modulations across three ELL topographic maps of electroreceptor distribution. Pyramidal cell recordings in vitro reveal two forms of oscillatory discharge with properties consistent with pyramidal cell frequency tuning in vivo. One is a slow oscillation of spike discharge arising from local circuit interactions that exhibits marked changes in several properties across the sensory maps. The second is a fast, intrinsic form of burst discharge that incorporates a newly recognized interaction between somatic and dendritic membranes. These findings suggest that a differential regulation of oscillatory discharge properties across sensory maps may underlie frequency tuning in the ELL and influence feature extraction in vivo.


1999 ◽  
Vol 202 (10) ◽  
pp. 1243-1253 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.J. Berman ◽  
L. Maler

The electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of weakly electric fish is the only nucleus that receives direct input from peripheral electroreceptor afferents. This review summarises the neurotransmitters, receptors and second messengers identified in the intrinsic circuitry of the ELL and the extrinsic descending direct and indirect feedback pathways, as revealed by recent in vitro and in vivo studies. Several hypotheses of circuitry function are examined on this basis and on the basis of recent functional evidence: (1) fast primary afferent excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) and fast granule cell 2 GABAA inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) suggest the involvement of basilar pyramidal cells in coincidence detection; (2) voltage-dependent EPSPs and IPSPs, dendritic spike bursts and frequency-dependent synaptic facilitation support a sensory searchlight role for the direct feedback pathway; and (3) the contributions of distal and proximal inhibition, anti-Hebbian plasticity and beam versus isolated fiber activity patterns are discussed with reference to an adaptive spatio-temporal filtering role for the indirect descending pathway.


1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 2364-2382 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. W. Turner ◽  
J. R. Plant ◽  
L. Maler

1. Three parallel maps of the distribution of tuberous electroreceptor inputs are found in the medullary electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of weakly electric fish. Pyramidal cells in each map are known to respond differentially to the frequency of amplitude modulations (AMs) of external electric fields in vivo. We used an in vitro ELL slice preparation of Apteronotus leptorhynchus to compare the characteristics of spontaneously active single units across the three tuberous maps. It was our objective to determine whether spontaneous bursting activity of pyramidal cells in each map correlates with the known AM frequency selectivities of pyramidal cells in vivo. 2. Single-unit discharges were recorded from the pyramidal cell layer of the centromedial segment (CMS), centrolateral segment (CLS), and lateral segment (LS) of the ELL. Stochastic analysis of interspike intervals (ISIs) was used to identify bursting and nonbursting unit activity, and to separately analyze intra- and interburst ISIs. Four ISI patterns were identified as 1) bursting, 2) regular spiking, 3) irregular spiking, and 4) highly irregular spiking. This work focuses primarily on the characteristics of bursting units across the ELL segments. 3. Spontaneous bursting discharge was identified in all three maps (68 of 97 units), with several characteristics changing in a gradual manner across the maps. The coefficient of variation (CV) of ISIs and intraburst ISIs decreased significantly from the CMS to the LS, whereas the CV of burst periods increased significantly from the CMS to the LS. Autocorrelations and power spectral density analysis identified units discharging in an oscillatory manner with the following ratio: CMS, 75%; CLS, 4%; LS, 8%. 4. The mean period of spike bursts decreased significantly across the segments (CMS, 2.7 s; CLS, 1.2 s; LS, 1.1 s) primarily because of a shortening of mean burst duration (CMS, 1.0 s; CLS, 0.1 s; LS, 0.05 s). The average number of spikes per burst decreased significantly across the maps (CMS, 61; CLS, 8; LS, 8), whereas the average frequency of spikes per burst increased (CMS, 90 Hz; CLS, 130 Hz; LS, 178 Hz), mainly through an increase in the maximal frequencies attained by units within each map. 5. Bursts in the CMS were unstructured in that the intraburst ISIs were serially independent, whereas for many units in the CLS and especially the LS there were serial dependencies of successive spikes, with alternating short and long ISIs during the burst. 6. These data reveal that the characteristics of bursting unit activity differ between the CMS, CLS, and LS maps in vitro, implying a modulation of the factors underlying burst discharge across multiple sensory maps. Because the pattern of change in burst activity between these maps parallels that of pyramidal cell AM frequency selectivity in vivo, oscillatory and burst discharge may represent the cellular mechanism used to tune these cells to specific frequencies of afferent input during electrolocation and electrocommunication.


2007 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 2731-2743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Marie M. Oswald ◽  
Brent Doiron ◽  
Leonard Maler

Short interspike intervals such as those that occur during burst firing are hypothesized to be distinct features of the neural code. Although a number of correlations between the occurrence of burst events and aspects of the stimulus have been identified, the relationship between burst characteristics and information transfer is uncertain. Pyramidal cells in the electrosensory lobe of the weakly electric fish, Apteronotus leptorhynchus, respond to dynamic broadband electrosensory stimuli with bursts and isolated spikes. In the present study, we mimic synaptic input during sensory stimulation by direct stimulation of electrosensory pyramidal cells with broadband current in vitro. The pyramidal cells respond to this stimulus with burst interspike intervals (ISIs) that are reliably and precisely correlated with the intensity of stimulus upstrokes. We found burst ISIs must differ by a minimum of 2 ms to discriminate, with low error, differences in stimulus intensity. Based on these results, we define and quantify a candidate interval code for the processing of sensory input. Finally, we demonstrate that interval coding is restricted to short ISIs such as those generated in burst events and that the proposed interval code is distinct from rate and timing codes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 714-723 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary Marsat ◽  
Rémi D. Proville ◽  
Leonard Maler

It is an important task in neuroscience to find general principles that relate neural codes to the structure of the signals they encode. The structure of sensory signals can be described in many ways, but one important categorization distinguishes continuous from transient signals. We used the communication signals of the weakly electric fish to reveal how transient signals (chirps) can be easily distinguished from the continuous signal they disrupt. These communication signals—low-frequency sinusoids interrupted by high-frequency transients—were presented to pyramidal cells of the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) during in vivo recordings. We show that a specific population of electrosensory neurons encodes the occurrence of the transient signal by synchronously producing a burst of spikes, whereas bursting was neither common nor synchronous in response to the continuous signal. We also confirmed that burst can be triggered by low-frequency modulations typical of prey signals. However, these bursts are more common in a different segment of the ELL and during spatially localized stimulation. These localized stimuli will elicit synchronized bursting only in a restricted number of cells the receptive fields of which overlap the spatial extent of the stimulus. Therefore the number of cells simultaneously producing a burst and the ELL segment responding most strongly may carry the information required to disambiguate chirps from prey signals. Finally we show that the burst response to chirps is due to a biophysical mechanism previously characterized by in vitro studies of electrosensory neurons. We conclude that bursting and synchrony across cells are important mechanisms used by sensory neurons to carry the information about behaviorally relevant but transient signals.


2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 2577-2595 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erez Persi ◽  
David Horn ◽  
Vladislav Volman ◽  
Ronen Segev ◽  
Eshel Ben-Jacob

Cultured in vitro neuronal networks are known to exhibit synchronized bursting events (SBE), during which most of the neurons in the system spike within a time window of approximately 100 msec. Such phenomena can be obtained in model networks based on Markram-Tsodyks frequency-dependent synapses. In order to account correctly for the detailed behavior of SBEs, several modifications have to be implemented in such models. Random input currents have to be introduced to account for the rising profile of SBEs. Dynamic thresholds and inhomogeneity in the distribution of neuronal resistances enable us to describe the profile of activity within the SBE and the heavy-tailed distributions of interspike intervals and interevent intervals. Thus, we can account for the interesting appearance of Lévy distributions in the data.


1984 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 264-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. E. Stafstrom ◽  
P. C. Schwindt ◽  
W. E. Crill

Input-output relations of large neurons from layer V of cat sensorimotor cortex were studied in an in vitro slice preparation using steps and ramps of intracellularly injected current. Depolarization attained during the interspike interval (ISI) was compared to the voltage levels required to activate a previously described (29) persistent sodium current (INaP). INaP was studied using a single-electrode voltage clamp in the same cells tested for firing behavior. Following an injected current step, firing rate declined smoothly to a steady level with a time course that was approximately exponential in most cells (tau, 9-43 ms). In most cells, the relation between firing rate and injected current (f-I relation) consisted of two linear segments, both for adapted, steady firing and for early intervals during adaptation. The slope of the steeper, initial (or sole) linear segment of the f-I curve averaged 26.2 Hz/nA during steady firing and was steeper when plotted for early interspike intervals. The variation of the depolarization at which spike initiation occurred (firing level) and the membrane potential between rhythmic spikes was examined during adaptation and steady firing. In most cells, firing level rose rapidly during a rhythmic train to a steady value. The steady firing level attained remained unchanged over a wide range of steady firing rates. Nevertheless, the mean depolarization during the interspike interval (V) increased approximately linearly with steady firing rate. Even at the slowest firing rates, V is sufficient to activate INaP. The use of injected current ramps demonstrated that neocortical cells were sensitive to rate of change of stimulus current (dI/dt) as well as its amplitude (I). The use of ramps followed by steady currents demonstrated that the repetitive response lagged behind changes in stimulus parameters and did not reach a steady state even during slow ramps; i.e., the response depended on time as well as on I and dI/dt. Instantaneous firing rate during the ramp increased linearly with time for a wide range of ramp slopes (dI/dt). The instantaneous firing rate of early interspike intervals was also linearly related to ramp slope for small ramp slopes. In spite of these linear relationships, quantitative analysis indicated that firing rate during ramp stimulation cannot, in general, be described by a simple linear combination of separate amplitude- and rate-dependent terms. The repetitive firing properties of the in vitro neurons are compared to those of in vivo neocortical neurons and other cell types.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 2273-2287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Toporikova ◽  
Maurice J. Chacron

Understanding the mechanistic substrates of neural computations that lead to behavior remains a fundamental problem in neuroscience. In particular, the contributions of intrinsic neural properties such as burst firing and dendritic morphology to the processing of behaviorally relevant sensory input have received much interest recently. Pyramidal cells within the electrosensory lateral line lobe of weakly electric fish display an intrinsic bursting mechanism that relies on somato-dendritic interactions when recorded in vitro: backpropagating somatic action potentials trigger dendritic action potentials that lead to a depolarizing afterpotential (DAP) at the soma. We recorded intracellularly from these neurons in vivo and found firing patterns that were quite different from those seen in vitro: we found no evidence for DAPs as each somatic action potential was followed by a pronounced afterhyperpolarization (AHP). Calcium chelators injected in vivo reduced the AHP, thereby unmasking the DAP and inducing in vitro-like bursting in pyramidal cells. These bursting dynamics significantly reduced the cell's ability to encode the detailed time course of sensory input. We performed additional in vivo pharmacological manipulations and mathematical modeling to show that calcium influx through N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors activate dendritic small conductance (SK) calcium-activated potassium channels, which causes an AHP that counteracts the DAP and leads to early termination of the burst. Our results show that ion channels located in dendrites can have a profound influence on the processing of sensory input by neurons in vivo through the modulation of an intrinsic bursting mechanism.


2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 1523-1545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brent Doiron ◽  
André Longtin ◽  
Ray W. Turner ◽  
Leonard Maler

Pyramidal cells of the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of the weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus have been shown to produce oscillatory burst discharge in the γ-frequency range (20–80 Hz) in response to constant depolarizing stimuli. Previous in vitro studies have shown that these bursts arise through a recurring spike backpropagation from soma to apical dendrites that is conditional on the frequency of action potential discharge (“conditional backpropagation”). Spike bursts are characterized by a progressive decrease in inter-spike intervals (ISIs), and an increase of dendritic spike duration and the amplitude of a somatic depolarizing afterpotential (DAP). The bursts are terminated when a high-frequency somatic spike doublet exceeds the dendritic spike refractory period, preventing spike backpropagation. We present a detailed multi-compartmental model of an ELL basilar pyramidal cell to simulate somatic and dendritic spike discharge and test the conditions necessary to produce a burst output. The model ionic channels are described by modified Hodgkin-Huxley equations and distributed over both soma and dendrites under the constraint of available immunocytochemical and electrophysiological data. The currents modeled are somatic and dendritic sodium and potassium involved in action potential generation, somatic and proximal apical dendritic persistent sodium, and KV3.3 and fast transient A-like potassium channels distributed over the entire model cell. The core model produces realistic somatic and dendritic spikes, differential spike refractory periods, and a somatic DAP. However, the core model does not produce oscillatory spike bursts with constant depolarizing stimuli. We find that a cumulative inactivation of potassium channels underlying dendritic spike repolarization is a necessary condition for the model to produce a sustained γ-frequency burst pattern matching experimental results. This cumulative inactivation accounts for a frequency-dependent broadening of dendritic spikes and results in a conditional failure of backpropagation when the intraburst ISI exceeds dendritic spike refractory period, terminating the burst. These findings implicate ion channels involved in repolarizing dendritic spikes as being central to the process of conditional backpropagation and oscillatory burst discharge in this principal sensory output neuron of the ELL.


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