A unified law for inhibitory control in active dendrites

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Abstract

Neuronal computation depends on the balance between excitation and inhibition, yet how this balance is implemented across the dendritic tree remains unclear. Classical views predict that inhibition should be most effective near the soma or along the path from excitation to output, but many interneuron subtypes preferentially target remote dendritic compartments. This apparent paradox is sharpened by active dendrites, where local NMDA spikes, calcium plateaus and backpropagating action potentials can make distal branches powerful contributors to somatic firing. Here we develop an analytical framework that extracts general principles of inhibition from biophysically detailed multi-compartment simulations. By reformulating the implicit voltage update of detailed neuron models as a matrix recursion, we derive exact voltage sensitivities to inhibitory synaptic perturbations. This leads to a unified Φ-a law: the somatic impact of inhibition factorizes into a global dendritic susceptibility term and a local synaptic perturbation term. Using this law to map inhibitory leverage and identify optimal inhibitory interventions, we show that active dendritic excitation can shift inhibitory hot zones from perisomatic regions toward distal or intermediate compartments. Across neocortical, hippocampal and striatal neuron models, the same response law explains convergent inhibitory strategies despite distinct cellular mechanisms. Our framework turns detailed numerical simulation into analytical theory, providing a general principle for how diverse dendritic inhibition controls active neurons.

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