Calcium Coding and Adaptive Temporal Computation in Cortical Pyramidal Neurons
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 79 (3), 1549-1566
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1998.79.3.1549
Abstract
Wang, Xiao-Jing. Calcium coding and adaptive temporal computation in cortical pyramidal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1549–1566, 1998. In this work, we present a quantitative theory of temporal spike-frequency adaptation in cortical pyramidal cells. Our model pyramidal neuron has two-compartments (a “soma” and a “dendrite”) with a voltage-gated Ca2+ conductance ( g Ca) and a Ca2+-dependent K+ conductance ( g AHP) located at the dendrite or at both compartments. Its frequency-current relations are comparable with data from cortical pyramidal cells, and the properties of spike-evoked intracellular [Ca2+] transients are matched with recent dendritic [Ca2+] imaging measurements. Spike-frequency adaptation in response to a current pulse is characterized by an adaptation time constant τadap and percentage adaptation of spike frequency F adap [% (peak − steady state)/peak]. We show how τadap and F adap can be derived in terms of the biophysical parameters of the neural membrane and [Ca2+] dynamics. Two simple, experimentally testable, relations between τadap and F adap are predicted. The dependence of τadap and F adap on current pulse intensity, electrotonic coupling between the two compartments, g AHP as well the [Ca2+] decay time constant τCa, is assessed quantitatively. In addition, we demonstrate that the intracellular [Ca2+] signal can encode the instantaneous neuronal firing rate and that the conductance-based model can be reduced to a simple calcium-model of neuronal activity that faithfully predicts the neuronal firing output even when the input varies relatively rapidly in time (tens to hundreds of milliseconds). Extensive simulations have been carried out for the model neuron with random excitatory synaptic inputs mimicked by a Poisson process. Our findings include 1) the instantaneous firing frequency (averaged over trials) shows strong adaptation similar to the case with current pulses; 2) when the g AHP is blocked, the dendritic g Ca could produce a hysteresis phenomenon where the neuron is driven to switch randomly between a quiescent state and a repetitive firing state. The firing pattern is very irregular with a large coefficient of variation of the interspike intervals (ISI CV > 1). The ISI distribution shows a long tail but is not bimodal. 3) By contrast, in an intrinsically bursting regime (with different parameter values), the model neuron displays a random temporal mixture of single action potentials and brief bursts of spikes. Its ISI distribution is often bimodal and its power spectrum has a peak. 4) The spike-adapting current I AHP, as delayed inhibition through intracellular Ca2+ accumulation, generates a “forward masking” effect, where a masking input dramatically reduces or completely suppresses the neuronal response to a subsequent test input. When two inputs are presented repetitively in time, this mechanism greatly enhances the ratio of the responses to the stronger and weaker inputs, fulfilling a cellular form of lateral inhibition in time. 5) The [Ca2+]-dependent I AHP provides a mechanism by which the neuron unceasingly adapts to the stochastic synaptic inputs, even in the stationary state following the input onset. This creates strong negative correlations between output ISIs in a frequency-dependent manner, while the Poisson input is totally uncorrelated in time. Possible functional implications of these results are discussed.Keywords
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