Abstract
Dendrites play an essential role in the integration of highly fluctuating input into neurons across all nervous systems. Nevertheless, they are often studied under the conditions where inputs to dendrites are sparse. Up to date, the dynamic properties of active dendrites facing in-vivo-like fluctuating input remains elusive. In this paper, we uncover fundamentally new dynamics in a canonical model of a dendritic compartment with active calcium channels, receiving in-vivo-like fluctuating input. We show in-vivo-like noise induces non-monotonic or bistable dynamics in the input-output relation of a dendritic compartment, both of which are absent in a noiseless condition. Our analysis shows that the timescales of the activation gating variable of the dendritic calcium dynamics determine noise-induced spontaneous order in the system. Noise can induce non-monotonicity or bistability with fast or slow calcium activation respectively. We characterize these noise-induced phenomena and their influence on the input-output relation. Furthermore, we show that timescales of the emerging stochastic bistable dynamics go far beyond a deterministic system due to stochastic switching between the solutions. Our results reveal that noise contributes to sustained dendritic nonlinearities, and it could be considered a principal component of the dendritic input integration strategies.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.