4.6 Article

Differential processing in modality-specific Mauthner cell dendrites

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 596, Issue 4, Pages 667-689

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP274861

Keywords

dendritic specialization; Mauthner cell; cross-modal dendritic interaction

Funding

  1. CONICET [PICT 20121578]
  2. Universidad de Buenos Aires [UBACyT 20020130300008BA]
  3. Universidad de Buenos Aires (Thalmann Award)
  4. National Science Foundation [IOS 1147172]
  5. Professional Staff Congress
  6. Research Foundation of the City University of New York

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Animals process multimodal information for adaptive behavioural decisions. In fish, evasion of a diving bird that breaks the water surface depends on integrating visual and auditory stimuli with very different characteristics. How do neurons process such differential sensory inputs at the dendritic level? For that, we studied the Mauthner cells (M-cells) in the goldfish startle circuit, which receive visual and auditory inputs via two separate dendrites, both accessible for in vivo recordings. We investigated whether electrophysiological membrane properties and dendrite morphology, studied in vivo, play a role in selective sensory processing in the M-cell. The results obtained show that anatomical and electrophysiological differences between the dendrites combine to produce stronger attenuation of visually evoked postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) than to auditory evoked PSPs. Interestingly, our recordings showed also cross-modal dendritic interaction because auditory evoked PSPs invade the ventral dendrite (VD), as well as the opposite where visual PSPs invade the lateral dendrite (LD). However, these interactions were asymmetrical, with auditory PSPs being more prominent in the VD than visual PSPs in the LD. Modelling experiments imply that this asymmetry is caused by active conductances expressed in the proximal segments of the VD. The results obtained in the present study suggest modality-dependent membrane specialization in M-cell dendrites suited for processing stimuli of different time domains and, more broadly, provide a compelling example of information processing in single neurons.

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