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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Subthreshold voltage noise of rat neocortical pyramidal neurones

TLDR
The results imply that ion channel noise contributes significantly to membrane voltage fluctuations at the subthreshold voltage range, and that Na+ conductance plays a key role in determining the amplitude of this noise by acting as a voltage‐dependent amplifier of low‐frequency transients.
Abstract
Neurones are noisy elements. Noise arises from both intrinsic and extrinsic sources, and manifests itself as fluctuations in the membrane potential. These fluctuations limit the accuracy of a neurone's output but have also been suggested to play a computational role. We present a detailed study of the amplitude and spectrum of voltage noise recorded at the soma of layer IV–V pyramidal neurones in slices taken from rat neocortex. The dependence of the noise on holding potential, synaptic activity and Na+ conductance is systematically analysed. We demonstrate that voltage noise increases non-linearly as the cell depolarizes (from a standard deviation (s.d.) of 0.19 mV at −75 mV to an s.d. of 0.54 mV at −55 mV). The increase in voltage noise is accompanied by an increase in the cell impedance, due to voltage dependence of Na+ conductance. The impedance increase accounts for the majority (70%) of the voltage noise increase. The increase in voltage noise and impedance is restricted to the low-frequency range (0.2–2 Hz). At the high frequency range (5–100 Hz) the voltage noise is dominated by synaptic activity. In our slice preparation, synaptic noise has little effect on the cell impedance. A minimal model reproduces qualitatively these data. Our results imply that ion channel noise contributes significantly to membrane voltage fluctuations at the subthreshold voltage range, and that Na+ conductance plays a key role in determining the amplitude of this noise by acting as a voltage-dependent amplifier of low-frequency transients.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Noise in the nervous system.

TL;DR: How noise affects neuronal networks and the principles the nervous system applies to counter detrimental effects of noise are highlighted, and noise's potential benefits are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ephaptic coupling of cortical neurons

TL;DR: It is found that endogenous brain activity can causally affect neural function through field effects under physiological conditions, and extracellular fields induced ephaptically mediated changes in the somatic membrane potential that were less than 0.5 mV under subthreshold conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity of coherent oscillations in rat hippocampus to AC electric fields

TL;DR: These threshold fields correspond to changes in somatic potential of ∼70 μV, below membrane potential noise levels for neurons, demonstrating the emergent properties of neuronal networks can be more sensitive than measurable effects in single neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single Ih channels in pyramidal neuron dendrites: properties, distribution, and impact on action potential output.

TL;DR: Voltage fluctuations attributable to stochastic Ih channel gating impact on action potential output, with greater spike-timing precision in models with the experimentally determined single-channel conductance are demonstrated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The NEURON simulation environment

TL;DR: This work presents the basic ideas that would help informed users make the most efficient use of NEURON, the powerful and flexible environment for implementing models of individual neurons and small networks of neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability of spike timing in neocortical neurons

TL;DR: Data suggest a low intrinsic noise level in spike generation, which could allow cortical neurons to accurately transform synaptic input into spike sequences, supporting a possible role for spike timing in the processing of cortical information by the neocortex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic resonance and the benefits of noise: from ice ages to crayfish and SQUIDs

TL;DR: In certain nonlinear systems, including electronic circuits and biological sensory apparatus, the presence of noise can in fact enhance the detection of weak signals, called stochastic resonance.
BookDOI

Biophysics of computation : information processing in single neurons

Christof Koch
TL;DR: This work presents simplified models of individual neurons, and unconventional coupling, of action-potential generation and phase space analysis of neuronal excitability in response to the Hodgkin-Huxley model.
Journal ArticleDOI

The high-conductance state of neocortical neurons in vivo.

TL;DR: Results from different approaches in understanding the integrative properties of neocortical neurons in the intact brain are summarized to help understand the complex interplay between the active properties of dendrites and how they convey discrete synaptic inputs to the soma.
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