Dendritic spikes and activity-dependent synaptic plasticity |
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Authors: | Knut Holthoff Yury Kovalchuk Arthur Konnerth |
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Institution: | (1) Institute of Neuroscience, Technical University Munich, Biedersteinerstrasse 29, 80802 Munich, Germany |
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Abstract: | Whereas the regenerative nature of action potential conduction in axons has been known since the late 1940s, neuronal dendrites have been considered as passive cables transferring incoming synaptic activity to the soma. The relatively recent discovery that neuronal dendrites contain active conductances has revolutionized our view of information processing in neurons. In many neuronal cell types, sodium action potentials initiated at the axon initial segment can back-propagate actively into the dendrite thereby serving, for the dendrite, as an indicator of the output activity of the neuron. In addition, the dendrites themselves can initiate action-potential-like regenerative responses, so-called dendritic spikes, that are mediated either by the activation of sodium, calcium, and/or N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor channels. Here, we review the recent experimental and theoretical evidence for a role of regenerative dendritic activity in information processing within neurons and, especially, in activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. |
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Keywords: | Dendritic spikes Synaptic plasticity LTD LTP |
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