The spine neck filters membrane potentials
Araya
Roberto
author
Columbia University. Biological Sciences
Jiang
Jiang
author
Columbia University. Biological Sciences
Eisenthal
Kenneth B.
author
Columbia University. Chemistry
Yuste
Rafael
author
Columbia University. Biological Sciences
Columbia University. Biological Sciences
originator
text
Articles
2006
English
Dendritic spines receive most synaptic inputs in the forebrain. Their morphology, with a spine head isolated from the dendrite by a slender neck, indicates a potential role in isolating inputs. Indeed, biochemical compartmentalization occurs at spine heads because of the diffusional bottleneck created by the spine neck. Here we investigate whether the spine neck also isolates inputs electrically. Using two-photon uncaging of glutamate on spine heads from mouse layer-5 neocortical pyramidal cells, we find that the amplitude of uncaging potentials at the soma is inversely proportional to neck length. This effect is strong and independent of the position of the spine in the dendritic tree and size of the spine head. Moreover, spines with long necks are electrically silent at the soma, although their heads are activated by the uncaging event, as determined with calcium imaging. Finally, second harmonic measurements of membrane potential reveal an attenuation of somatic voltages into the spine head, an attenuation directly proportional to neck length. We conclude that the spine neck plays an electrical role in the transmission of membrane potentials, isolating synapses electrically.
Neurosciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
103
47
17961
17966
2006-11-08
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0608755103
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:14167
NNC
NNC
2012-07-20 15:45:30 -0400
2013-02-26 11:24:31 -0500
8174
eng