Cortical Computing

A study shows that dendrites not only transmit information between neurons, but also process some of that information.

Written byAbby Olena, PhD
| 2 min read

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Pipette attached to a dendriteEUREKALERT, SPENCER SMITHDendrites—the branches that cover a neuron’s cell body—were once believed to function primarily as signal conductors, relaying information between nerve cells. Recent evidence has suggested that dendrites can also respond to stimuli, but it was unknown whether action potentials generated by dendrites were integrated into the signals that the neuron sent to receiving cells. Researchers have demonstrated that dendrites had electrical responses, or dendritic spikes, to visual stimuli in vivo and that these spikes enhanced the output of the neuron. Their work was published this week (October 27) in Nature.

“Imagine you’re reverse engineering a piece of alien technology, and what you thought was simple wiring turns out to be transistors that compute information,” study coauthor Spencer Smith of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill said in a statement. “That’s what this finding is like. The implications are exciting to think about.”

The research team exposed mice to visual stimuli and made electrophysiological recordings from single dendrites of pyramidal cells in the rodents’ visual cortices. The researchers then compared the dendritic recordings to recordings from the cell body. They also made recordings at dendrites while simultaneously measuring fluctuations of calcium ions in the cell body. Because the activity in the soma and at the dendrites differed, the researchers concluded that the spikes they ...

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  • abby olena

    As a freelancer for The Scientist, Abby reports on new developments in life science for the website. She has a PhD from Vanderbilt University and got her start in science journalism as the Chicago Tribune’s AAAS Mass Media Fellow in 2013. Following a stint as an intern for The Scientist, Abby was a postdoc in science communication at Duke University, where she developed and taught courses to help scientists share their research. In addition to her work as a science journalist, she leads science writing and communication workshops and co-produces a conversational podcast. She is based in Alabama.  

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