Low Somatic Sodium Conductance Enhances Action Potential Precision in Time-Coding Auditory Neurons.
Yang YangBina RamamurthyAndreas NeefMatthew A Xu-FriedmanPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Proper hearing depends on analyzing temporal aspects of sounds with high precision. Auditory neurons that specialize in precise temporal information have a suite of unusual intrinsic properties, including nonovershooting action potentials and few sodium channels in the soma. However, it was not clear how low sodium channel availability in the soma influenced the temporal precision of action potentials initiated in the axon initial segment. We studied this using dynamic clamp to mimic sodium channels in the soma, which yielded normal, overshooting action potentials. Increasing somatic sodium conductance had major negative consequences: synaptic activity evoked action potentials with lower fidelity, and the precision of coincidence detection was degraded. Thus, low somatic sodium channel availability appears to enhance fidelity and temporal precision.