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Democratization in a passive dendritic tree: an analytical
investigation
Yulia Timofeeva, Steve Cox, Steve Coombes, and Kresimir Josic
One way to achieve amplification of distal synaptic inputs on a dendritic tree
is to scale the amplitude and/or duration of the synaptic conductance with its
distance from the soma. This is an example of what is often referred to as âdendritic democracy. Although well studied experimentally, to date this phenomenon
has not been thoroughly explored from a mathematical perspective. In this paper
we adopt a passive model of a dendritic tree with distributed excitatory synaptic
conductances and analyze a number of key measures of democracy. In particular,
via moment methods we derive laws for the transport, from synapse to soma, of
strength, characteristic time, and dispersion. These laws lead immediately to synap-
tic scalings that overcome attenuation with distance. We follow this with a Neumann
approximation of Green's representation that readily produces the synaptic scaling
that democratizes the peak somatic voltage response. Results are obtained for both
idealized geometries and for the more realistic geometry of a rat CA1 pyramidal cell.
For each measure of democratization we produce and contrast the synaptic scaling
associated with treating the synapse as either a conductance change or a current
injection. We find that our respective scalings agree up to a critical distance from
the soma and we reveal how this critical distance decreases with decreasing branch
radius.
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