Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes

In chemical synapses of the central nervous system (CNS), information is transmitted via the presynaptic release of a vesicle (or ‘quantum’) of neurotransmitter, which elicits a postsynaptic electrical response with an amplitude termed the ‘quantal size.’ Measuring amplitudes of miniature postsynapt...

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Main Authors: Martynas Dervinis, Guy Major
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncel.2025.1590157/full
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author Martynas Dervinis
Guy Major
author_facet Martynas Dervinis
Guy Major
author_sort Martynas Dervinis
collection DOAJ
description In chemical synapses of the central nervous system (CNS), information is transmitted via the presynaptic release of a vesicle (or ‘quantum’) of neurotransmitter, which elicits a postsynaptic electrical response with an amplitude termed the ‘quantal size.’ Measuring amplitudes of miniature postsynaptic currents (mPSCs) or potentials (mPSPs) at the cell soma is generally thought to offer a technically straightforward way to estimate quantal sizes, as each of these miniature responses (or minis) is generally thought to be elicited by the spontaneous release of a single neurotransmitter vesicle. However, in large highly-branched neurons, a somatically recorded mini is typically massively attenuated compared with at its input site, and a significant fraction are indistinguishable from (or canceled out by) background noise fluctuations. Here, using a new software package called ‘minis,’ we describe a novel quantal analysis method that estimates the effective ‘electrical sizes’ of synapses by comparing events detected in somatic recordings from the same neuron of (a) real minis and (b) background noise (with minis blocked pharmacologically) with simulated minis added by a genetic algorithm. The estimated minis’ distributions reveal a striking inverse dependence of mean excitatory mPSP amplitude on total cell membrane capacitance (proportional to cell size, or more exactly, extracellular membrane surface area) suggesting that, in rat somatosensory cortex at least, the average charge injected by single excitatory synapses (ca. 30 fC) is conserved across neocortical pyramidal neurons of very different sizes (across a more than three-fold range).
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spelling doaj-art-2f088f5a86be40f6b60fb524c3b785f62025-08-20T02:07:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience1662-51022025-06-011910.3389/fncel.2025.15901571590157Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizesMartynas DervinisGuy MajorIn chemical synapses of the central nervous system (CNS), information is transmitted via the presynaptic release of a vesicle (or ‘quantum’) of neurotransmitter, which elicits a postsynaptic electrical response with an amplitude termed the ‘quantal size.’ Measuring amplitudes of miniature postsynaptic currents (mPSCs) or potentials (mPSPs) at the cell soma is generally thought to offer a technically straightforward way to estimate quantal sizes, as each of these miniature responses (or minis) is generally thought to be elicited by the spontaneous release of a single neurotransmitter vesicle. However, in large highly-branched neurons, a somatically recorded mini is typically massively attenuated compared with at its input site, and a significant fraction are indistinguishable from (or canceled out by) background noise fluctuations. Here, using a new software package called ‘minis,’ we describe a novel quantal analysis method that estimates the effective ‘electrical sizes’ of synapses by comparing events detected in somatic recordings from the same neuron of (a) real minis and (b) background noise (with minis blocked pharmacologically) with simulated minis added by a genetic algorithm. The estimated minis’ distributions reveal a striking inverse dependence of mean excitatory mPSP amplitude on total cell membrane capacitance (proportional to cell size, or more exactly, extracellular membrane surface area) suggesting that, in rat somatosensory cortex at least, the average charge injected by single excitatory synapses (ca. 30 fC) is conserved across neocortical pyramidal neurons of very different sizes (across a more than three-fold range).https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncel.2025.1590157/fullminiature post-synaptic potentialmPSPmEPSPminisynaptic chargemembrane capacitance
spellingShingle Martynas Dervinis
Guy Major
Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
miniature post-synaptic potential
mPSP
mEPSP
mini
synaptic charge
membrane capacitance
title Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
title_full Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
title_fullStr Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
title_full_unstemmed Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
title_short Average miniature post-synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
title_sort average miniature post synaptic potential size is inversely proportional to membrane capacitance across neocortical pyramidal neurons of different sizes
topic miniature post-synaptic potential
mPSP
mEPSP
mini
synaptic charge
membrane capacitance
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncel.2025.1590157/full
work_keys_str_mv AT martynasdervinis averageminiaturepostsynapticpotentialsizeisinverselyproportionaltomembranecapacitanceacrossneocorticalpyramidalneuronsofdifferentsizes
AT guymajor averageminiaturepostsynapticpotentialsizeisinverselyproportionaltomembranecapacitanceacrossneocorticalpyramidalneuronsofdifferentsizes