Dendrite

Derived from the Greek word dendron meaning ‘tree’, in biology, it is a branch-like nerve cell process collecting incoming or afferent information in the form of electrical signals.  It receives synapses from the axon terminals of neurons, but unlike a neuron it is not myelinated.  Pyramidal neurons have a tall-tree-like apical dendrite plus some root-like basal dendrites.  At least in cerebral cortex, dendrites are the receiving branches of the neuron and the axon is the sending branch.  Elsewhere, some dendrites can also act like axon terminals, releasing neurotransmitters in response to impulses and local voltage changes.  Some dendrites have spines (small fibers and bumps) on their surface, which serve to greatly increase the surface area of a neuron (see figure below).  One important feature of dendrites is that the shape of their tree-like structure differs between varieties of neurons, which allows neurons to be classified.  During development and learning, the number of spines increases, and then decreases with ageing.  The pathologist Miguel Marin-Padilla, in advocating that structural abnormalities in the brain are associated with mental retardation, found that the cerebral cortices of individuals with Down’s syndrome contained underdeveloped neurons with fewer dendrites and deformed dendritic spines. The term ‘dendrite’ was coined by the Swiss cardiologist Wilhelm His (1863-1934) in 1889, and Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1832-1934) first described dendritic spines in 1891. 

Dendritic spines that serve to increase the surface of the receiving area of a neuron 

See Axon, Axon hillock, Cerebellum (development), Cerebral cortex (or pallium), Down’s syndrome, Neurite,  Neurotransmitters, Neuron, Nissl substance, Synapse, Receptive field