Wide-band information transmission at the calyx of Held

Article


Yang, Z., Hennig, M., Postlethwaite, M., Forsythe, I. and Graham, B. 2009. Wide-band information transmission at the calyx of Held. Neural Computation. 21 (4), pp. 991-1017. https://doi.org/10.1162/neco.2008.02-08-714
TypeArticle
TitleWide-band information transmission at the calyx of Held
AuthorsYang, Z., Hennig, M., Postlethwaite, M., Forsythe, I. and Graham, B.
Abstract

We use a mathematical model of the calyx of Held to explore information transmission at this giant glutamatergic synapse. The significant depression of the postsynaptic response to repeated stimulation in vitro is a result of various activity-dependent processes in multiple timescales, which can be reproduced by multiexponential functions in this model. When the postsynaptic current is stimulated by Poisson-distributed spike trains, its amplitude varies considerably with the preceding interspike intervals. Here we quantify the information contained in the postsynaptic current amplitude about preceding interspike intervals and determine the impact of different pre- and postsynaptic factors on information transmission. The mutual information between presynaptic spike times and the amplitude of the postsynaptic response in general decreases as the mean stimulation rate increases, but remains high even at frequencies greater than 100 Hz, unlike at many neocortical synapses. The maintenance of information transmission is attributable largely to vesicle recycling rates at low frequencies of stimulation, shifting to vesicle release probability at high frequencies. Also, at higher frequencies, the synapse operates largely in a release-ready mode in which most release sites contain a release-ready vesicle and release probabilities are low.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherMIT Press
JournalNeural Computation
ISSN0899-7667
Publication dates
PrintApr 2009
Publication process dates
Deposited28 Jan 2013
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1162/neco.2008.02-08-714
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