| Home > Documents in Process > Bimodal nonlinear dendrites in PV+ basket cells drive distinct memory-related oscillations. |
| Journal Article | DZNE-2025-01256 |
; ;
2025
Elsevier
St. Louis
This record in other databases:
Please use a persistent id in citations: doi:10.1016/j.isci.2025.113699
Abstract: PV+ FSBCs are critical for modulating hippocampal oscillations, which are essential for memory and behavior. Our research uses biophysical modeling to propose a cellular, dendritic dependent mechanism: these interneurons can dynamically switch their firing patterns by engaging different dendritic integration modes. We predict that PV+ FSBCs can use their supralinear and sublinear dendrites to selectively influence brain rhythms without changes in synaptic input amount. Supralinear dendrites promote high-frequency oscillations and decrease the circuit's excitation/inhibition (E/I) balance. Conversely, sublinear dendrites enhance slow oscillatory power and increase the E/I balance. This bimodal dendritic strategy gives PV+ FSBCs an energy-efficient way to regulate oscillations. It suggests that the specific computations happening within the dendrites of these interneurons can critically shape memory-related brain rhythms. This offers an experimentally testable hypothesis about the subcellular mechanisms of rhythm generation in the hippocampus.
Keyword(s): Behavioral neuroscience ; Biological sciences ; Cellular neuroscience ; Cognitive neuroscience ; Natural sciences ; Neuroscience
|
The record appears in these collections: |