Link to HAL – hal-02918522
Link to DOI – 10.1007/s10827-019-00725-5
Journal of Computational Neuroscience, 2019, 47 (1), pp.77-89. ⟨10.1007/s10827-019-00725-5⟩
The biophysical properties of dendritic spines play a critical role in neuronal integration but are still poorly understood, due to experimental difficulties in accessing them. Spine biophysics has been traditionally explored using computational models based on cable theory. However, cable theory ignores electrodiffusion (i.e. the interaction between electric fields and ionic diffusion) as it assumes that concentration changes associated with ionic currents are negligible. This assumption, while true for large neuronal compartments, could be incorrect when applied to some femto-liter size structures such as dendritic spines. To explore this, we use here the Poisson (P) and Nernst-Planck (NP) equations, which relate electric field to charge and Fick’s law of diffusion, to model ion concentration dynamics in spines receiving excitatory synaptic potentials (EPSPs). We use experimentally measured voltage transients from spines with nanoelectrodes to explore these dynamics with realistic parameters. We find that (i) passive diffusion and electrodiffusion jointly affect the kinetics of spine EPSPs; (ii) spine geometry plays a key role in shaping EPSPs; and, (iii) the spine-neck resistance dynamically decreases during EPSPs, leading to short-term synaptic facilitation. Our formulation, which complements and extends cable theory, can be easily adapted to model ionic biophysics in other nanoscale bio-compartments.