Title
The Morphological Identity Of Insect Dendrites
Abstract
Dendrite morphology, a neuron's anatomical fingerprint, is a neuroscientist's asset in unveiling organizational principles in the brain. However, the genetic program encoding the morphological identity of a single dendrite remains a mystery. In order to obtain a formal understanding of dendritic branching, we studied distributions of morphological parameters in a group of four individually identifiable neurons of the fly visual system. We found that parameters relating to the branching topology were similar throughout all cells. Only parameters relating to the area covered by the dendrite were cell type specific. With these areas, artificial dendrites were grown based on optimization principles minimizing the amount of wiring and maximizing synaptic democracy. Although the same branching rule was used for all cells, this yielded dendritic structures virtually indistinguishable from their real counterparts. From these principles we derived a fully-automated model-based neuron reconstruction procedure validating the artificial branching rule. In conclusion, we suggest that the genetic program implementing neuronal branching could be constant in all cells whereas the one responsible for the dendrite spanning field should be cell specific.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000251
PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Keywords
Field
DocType
visual system
Anatomy,Neuroscience,Dendrite (metal),Biology,Insect,Cell type,Neuroanatomy,Genetics,Neuron,Neuroscientist,Genetic program,Dendrite
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
4
12
1553-7358
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
17
1.47
2
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Hermann Cuntz1807.71
Friedrich Forstner2634.78
Juergen Haag3233.54
Alexander Borst4879.10