| Literature DB >> 10924935 |
Abstract
The persistent sodium current density (I(NaP)) at the soma measured with the 'whole-cell' patch-clamp recording method is linearized about the resting state and used as a current source along the dendritic cable (depicting the spatial distribution of voltage-dependent persistent sodium ionic channels). This procedure allows time-dependent analytical solutions to be obtained for the membrane depolarization. Computer simulated response to a dendritic current injection in the form of synaptically-induced voltage change located at a distance from the recording site in a cable with unequally distributed persistent sodium ion channel densities per unit length of cable (the so-called 'hot-spots') is used to obtain conclusions on the density and distribution of persistent sodium ion channels. It is shown that the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) are amplified if hot-spots of persistent sodium ion channels are spatially distributed along the dendritic cable, with the local density of I(NaP) with respect to the recording site shown to specifically increase the peak amplitude of the EPSP for a proximally placed synaptic input, while the spatial distribution of I(NaP) serves to broaden the time course of the amplified EPSP. However, in the case of a distally positioned synaptic input, both local and nonlocal densities yield an approximately identical enhancement of EPSPs in contradiction to the computer simulations performed by Lipowsky et al. [J. Neurophysiol. 76 (1996) 2181]. The results indicate that persistent sodium channels produce EPSP amplification even when their distribution is relatively sparse (i.e. , approximately 1-2% of the transient sodium channels are found in dendrites of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons). This gives a strong impetus for the use of the theory as a novel approach in the investigation of synaptic integration of signals in active dendrites represented as ionic cables.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10924935 DOI: 10.1016/s0025-5564(00)00031-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Math Biosci ISSN: 0025-5564 Impact factor: 2.144