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1.
J Neurosci ; 44(19)2024 May 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38485258

RESUMO

The superior colliculus receives powerful synaptic inputs from corticotectal neurons in the visual cortex. The function of these corticotectal neurons remains largely unknown due to a limited understanding of their response properties and connectivity. Here, we use antidromic methods to identify corticotectal neurons in awake male and female rabbits, and measure their axonal conduction times, thalamic inputs and receptive field properties. All corticotectal neurons responded to sinusoidal drifting gratings with a nonlinear (nonsinusoidal) increase in mean firing rate but showed pronounced differences in their ON-OFF receptive field structures that we classified into three groups, Cx, S2, and S1. Cx receptive fields had highly overlapping ON and OFF subfields as classical complex cells, S2 had largely separated ON and OFF subfields as classical simple cells, and S1 had a single ON or OFF subfield. Thus, all corticotectal neurons are homogeneous in their nonlinear spatial summation but very heterogeneous in their spatial integration of ON and OFF inputs. The Cx type had the fastest conducting axons, the highest spontaneous activity, and the strongest and fastest visual responses. The S2 type had the highest orientation selectivity, and the S1 type had the slowest conducting axons. Moreover, our cross-correlation analyses found that a subpopulation of corticotectal neurons with very fast conducting axons and high spontaneous firing rates (largely "Cx" type) receives monosynaptic input from retinotopically aligned thalamic neurons. This previously unrecognized fast-conducting thalamic-mediated corticotectal pathway may provide specialized information to superior colliculus and prime recipient neurons for subsequent corticotectal or retinal synaptic input.


Assuntos
Neurônios , Sinapses , Tálamo , Córtex Visual , Vias Visuais , Vigília , Animais , Coelhos , Masculino , Feminino , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Vigília/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/citologia , Sinapses/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Tálamo/citologia , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Campos Visuais/fisiologia , Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Colículos Superiores/fisiologia , Colículos Superiores/citologia
2.
Elife ; 92020 12 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33289630

RESUMO

Some cortical neurons receive highly selective thalamocortical (TC) input, but others do not. Here, we examine connectivity of single thalamic neurons (lateral geniculate nucleus, LGN) onto putative fast-spike inhibitory interneurons in layer 4 of rabbit visual cortex. We show that three 'rules' regulate this connectivity. These rules concern: (1) the precision of retinotopic alignment, (2) the amplitude of the postsynaptic local field potential elicited near the interneuron by spikes of the LGN neuron, and (3) the interneuron's response latency to strong, synchronous LGN input. We found that virtually all first-order fast-spike interneurons receive input from nearly all LGN axons that synapse nearby, regardless of their visual response properties. This was not the case for neighboring regular-spiking neurons. We conclude that profuse and highly promiscuous TC inputs to layer-4 fast-spike inhibitory interneurons generate response properties that are well-suited to mediate a fast, sensitive, and broadly tuned feed-forward inhibition of visual cortical excitatory neurons.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Corpos Geniculados/citologia , Interneurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Animais , Vias Neurais/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Coelhos , Transmissão Sináptica/fisiologia
3.
J Neurosci ; 40(21): 4185-4202, 2020 05 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32303648

RESUMO

Information transmission in neural networks is influenced by both short-term synaptic plasticity (STP) as well as nonsynaptic factors, such as after-hyperpolarization currents and changes in excitability. Although these effects have been widely characterized in vitro using intracellular recordings, how they interact in vivo is unclear. Here, we develop a statistical model of the short-term dynamics of spike transmission that aims to disentangle the contributions of synaptic and nonsynaptic effects based only on observed presynaptic and postsynaptic spiking. The model includes a dynamic functional connection with short-term plasticity as well as effects due to the recent history of postsynaptic spiking and slow changes in postsynaptic excitability. Using paired spike recordings, we find that the model accurately describes the short-term dynamics of in vivo spike transmission at a diverse set of identified and putative excitatory synapses, including a pair of connected neurons within thalamus in mouse, a thalamocortical connection in a female rabbit, and an auditory brainstem synapse in a female gerbil. We illustrate the utility of this modeling approach by showing how the spike transmission patterns captured by the model may be sufficient to account for stimulus-dependent differences in spike transmission in the auditory brainstem (endbulb of Held). Finally, we apply this model to large-scale multielectrode recordings to illustrate how such an approach has the potential to reveal cell type-specific differences in spike transmission in vivo Although STP parameters estimated from ongoing presynaptic and postsynaptic spiking are highly uncertain, our results are partially consistent with previous intracellular observations in these synapses.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Although synaptic dynamics have been extensively studied and modeled using intracellular recordings of postsynaptic currents and potentials, inferring synaptic effects from extracellular spiking is challenging. Whether or not a synaptic current contributes to postsynaptic spiking depends not only on the amplitude of the current, but also on many other factors, including the activity of other, typically unobserved, synapses, the overall excitability of the postsynaptic neuron, and how recently the postsynaptic neuron has spiked. Here, we developed a model that, using only observations of presynaptic and postsynaptic spiking, aims to describe the dynamics of in vivo spike transmission by modeling both short-term synaptic plasticity (STP) and nonsynaptic effects. This approach may provide a novel description of fast, structured changes in spike transmission.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Plasticidade Neuronal/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Transmissão Sináptica/fisiologia , Animais , Gerbillinae , Camundongos , Técnicas de Patch-Clamp , Coelhos , Sinapses/fisiologia
4.
Cell Rep ; 27(13): 3733-3740.e3, 2019 06 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31242407

RESUMO

The retinas of rabbits and rodents have directionally selective (DS) retinal ganglion cells that convey directional signals through the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the thalamus to the primary visual cortex (V1). Notably, the function and synaptic impact in V1 of these directional LGN signals are unknown. Here we measured, in awake rabbits, the synaptic impact generated in V1 by individual LGN DS neurons. We show that these neurons make fast and strong connections in layers 4 and 6, with postsynaptic effects that are similar to those made by LGN concentric neurons, the main thalamic drivers of V1. By contrast, the synaptic impact of LGN DS neurons on superficial cortical layers was not detectable. These results suggest that LGN DS neurons activate a cortical column by targeting the main cortical input layers and that the role of DS input to superficial cortical layers is likely to be weak and/or modulatory.


Assuntos
Corpos Geniculados/metabolismo , Neurônios/metabolismo , Transmissão Sináptica , Córtex Visual/metabolismo , Vias Visuais/metabolismo , Animais , Corpos Geniculados/citologia , Neurônios/citologia , Coelhos , Córtex Visual/citologia , Vias Visuais/citologia
5.
Cereb Cortex ; 29(1): 336-355, 2019 01 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30321290

RESUMO

The primary visual cortex of carnivores and primates is dominated by the OFF visual pathway and responds more strongly to dark than light stimuli. Here, we demonstrate that this cortical OFF dominance is modulated by the size and spatial frequency of the stimulus in awake primates and we uncover a main neuronal mechanism underlying this modulation. We show that large grating patterns with low spatial frequencies drive five times more OFF-dominated than ON-dominated neurons, but this pronounced cortical OFF dominance is strongly reduced when the grating size decreases and the spatial frequency increases, as when the stimulus moves away from the observer. We demonstrate that the reduction in cortical OFF dominance is not caused by a selective reduction of visual responses in OFF-dominated neurons but by a change in the ON/OFF response balance of neurons with diverse receptive field properties that can be ON or OFF dominated, simple, or complex. We conclude that cortical OFF dominance is continuously adjusted by a neuronal mechanism that modulates ON/OFF response balance in multiple cortical neurons when the spatial properties of the visual stimulus change with viewing distance and/or optical blur.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Animais , Macaca mulatta , Masculino
6.
Nat Methods ; 14(9): 847-848, 2017 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28858341
7.
J Neurosci ; 37(26): 6342-6358, 2017 06 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28559382

RESUMO

Thalamocortical conduction times are short, but layer 6 corticothalamic axons display an enormous range of conduction times, some exceeding 40-50 ms. Here, we investigate (1) how axonal conduction times of corticogeniculate (CG) neurons are related to the visual information conveyed to the thalamus, and (2) how alert versus nonalert awake brain states affect visual processing across the spectrum of CG conduction times. In awake female Dutch-Belted rabbits, we found 58% of CG neurons to be visually responsive, and 42% to be unresponsive. All responsive CG neurons had simple, orientation-selective receptive fields, and generated sustained responses to stationary stimuli. CG axonal conduction times were strongly related to modulated firing rates (F1 values) generated by drifting grating stimuli, and their associated interspike interval distributions, suggesting a continuum of visual responsiveness spanning the spectrum of axonal conduction times. CG conduction times were also significantly related to visual response latency, contrast sensitivity (C-50 values), directional selectivity, and optimal stimulus velocity. Increasing alertness did not cause visually unresponsive CG neurons to become responsive and did not change the response linearity (F1/F0 ratios) of visually responsive CG neurons. However, for visually responsive CG neurons, increased alertness nearly doubled the modulated response amplitude to optimal visual stimulation (F1 values), significantly shortened response latency, and dramatically increased response reliability. These effects of alertness were uniform across the broad spectrum of CG axonal conduction times.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Corticothalamic neurons of layer 6 send a dense feedback projection to thalamic nuclei that provide input to sensory neocortex. While sensory information reaches the cortex after brief thalamocortical axonal delays, corticothalamic axons can exhibit conduction delays of <2 ms to 40-50 ms. Here, in the corticogeniculate visual system of awake rabbits, we investigate the functional significance of this axonal diversity, and the effects of shifting alert/nonalert brain states on corticogeniculate processing. We show that axonal conduction times are strongly related to multiple visual response properties, suggesting a continuum of visual responsiveness spanning the spectrum of corticogeniculate axonal conduction times. We also show that transitions between awake brain states powerfully affect corticogeniculate processing, in some ways more strongly than in layer 4.


Assuntos
Nível de Alerta/fisiologia , Corpos Geniculados/fisiologia , Condução Nervosa/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Animais , Axônios/fisiologia , Feminino , Vias Neurais/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Coelhos , Campos Visuais , Vigília/fisiologia
8.
J Neurosci ; 37(20): 5123-5143, 2017 05 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28432143

RESUMO

A resurgence has taken place in recent years in the use of the extracellularly recorded local field potential (LFP) to investigate neural network activity. To probe monosynaptic thalamic activation of cortical postsynaptic target cells, so called spike-trigger-averaged LFP (stLFP) signatures have been measured. In these experiments, the cortical LFP is measured by multielectrodes covering several cortical lamina and averaged on spontaneous spikes of thalamocortical (TC) cells. Using a well established forward-modeling scheme, we investigated the biophysical origin of this stLFP signature with simultaneous synaptic activation of cortical layer-4 neurons, mimicking the effect of a single afferent spike from a single TC neuron. Constrained by previously measured intracellular responses of the main postsynaptic target cell types and with biologically plausible assumptions regarding the spatial distribution of thalamic synaptic inputs into layer 4, the model predicted characteristic contributions to monosynaptic stLFP signatures both for the regular-spiking (RS) excitatory neurons and the fast-spiking (FS) inhibitory interneurons. In particular, the FS cells generated stLFP signatures of shorter temporal duration than the RS cells. Added together, a sum of the stLFP signatures of these two principal synaptic targets of TC cells were observed to resemble experimentally measured stLFP signatures. Outside the volume targeted by TC afferents, the resulting postsynaptic LFP signals were found to be sharply attenuated. This implies that such stLFP signatures provide a very local measure of TC synaptic activation, and that newly developed inverse current-source density (CSD)-estimation methods are needed for precise assessment of the underlying spatiotemporal CSD profiles.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Despite its long history and prevalent use, the proper interpretation of the extracellularly recorded local field potential (LFP) is still not fully established. Here we investigate by biophysical modeling the origin of the focal LFP signature of the single-axon monosynaptic thalamocortical connection as measured by spike-trigger-averaging of cortical LFPs on spontaneous spikes of thalamocortical neurons. We find that this LFP signature is well accounted for by a model assuming thalamic projections to two cortical layer-4 cell populations: one excitatory (putatively regular-spiking cells) and one inhibitory (putatively fast-spiking cells). The LFP signature is observed to decay sharply outside the cortical region receiving the thalamocortical projection, implying that it indeed provides a very local measure of thalamocortical synaptic activation.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Axônios/fisiologia , Córtex Cerebral/fisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Sinapses/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Animais , Simulação por Computador , Conectoma/métodos , Humanos , Rede Nervosa/fisiologia , Vias Neurais/fisiologia
10.
J Neurophysiol ; 114(2): 1172-82, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26108950

RESUMO

Sensory adaptation serves to adjust awake brains to changing environments on different time scales. However, adaptation has been studied traditionally under anesthesia and for short time periods. Here, we demonstrate in awake rabbits a novel type of sensory adaptation that persists for >1 h and acts on visual thalamocortical neurons and their synapses in the input layers of the visual cortex. Following prolonged visual stimulation (10-30 min), cells in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) show a severe and prolonged reduction in spontaneous firing rate. This effect is bidirectional, and prolonged visually induced response suppression is followed by a prolonged increase in spontaneous activity. The reduction in thalamic spontaneous activity following prolonged visual activation is accompanied by increases in 1) response reliability, 2) signal detectability, and 3) the ratio of visual signal/spontaneous activity. In addition, following such prolonged activation of an LGN neuron, the monosynaptic currents generated by thalamic impulses in layer 4 of the primary visual cortex are enhanced. These results demonstrate that in awake brains, prolonged sensory stimulation can have a profound, long-lasting effect on the information conveyed by thalamocortical inputs to the visual cortex.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Corpos Geniculados/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Potenciais de Ação , Animais , Eletroencefalografia , Feminino , Microeletrodos , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Coelhos , Fatores de Tempo
11.
Cereb Cortex ; 25(7): 1920-37, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24464943

RESUMO

Vision emerges from activation of chromatic and achromatic retinal channels whose interaction in visual cortex is still poorly understood. To investigate this interaction, we recorded neuronal activity from retinal ganglion cells and V1 cortical cells in macaques and measured their visual responses to grating stimuli that had either luminance contrast (luminance grating), chromatic contrast (chromatic grating), or a combination of the two (compound grating). As with parvocellular or koniocellular retinal ganglion cells, some V1 cells responded mostly to the chromatic contrast of the compound grating. As with magnocellular retinal ganglion cells, other V1 cells responded mostly to the luminance contrast and generated a frequency-doubled response to equiluminant chromatic gratings. Unlike magnocellular and parvocellular retinal ganglion cells, V1 cells formed a unimodal distribution for luminance/color preference with a 2- to 4-fold bias toward luminance. V1 cells associated with positive local field potentials in deep layers showed the strongest combined responses to color and luminance and, as a population, V1 cells encoded a diverse combination of luminance/color edges that matched edge distributions of natural scenes. Taken together, these results suggest that the primary visual cortex combines magnocellular and parvocellular retinal inputs to increase cortical receptive field diversity and to optimize visual processing of our natural environment.


Assuntos
Células Ganglionares da Retina/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Potenciais de Ação , Animais , Eletrodos Implantados , Macaca fascicularis , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Vias Visuais/fisiologia
12.
Cereb Cortex ; 25(10): 3877-93, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25416722

RESUMO

Local field potentials (LFPs) have become an important measure of neuronal population activity in the brain and could provide robust signals to guide the implant of visual cortical prosthesis in the future. However, it remains unclear whether LFPs can detect weak cortical responses (e.g., cortical responses to equiluminant color) and whether they have enough visual spatial resolution to distinguish different chromatic and achromatic stimulus patterns. By recording from awake behaving macaques in primary visual cortex, here we demonstrate that LFPs respond robustly to pure chromatic stimuli and exhibit ∼2.5 times lower spatial resolution for chromatic than achromatic stimulus patterns, a value that resembles the ratio of achromatic/chromatic resolution measured with psychophysical experiments in humans. We also show that, although the spatial resolution of LFP decays with visual eccentricity as is also the case for single neurons, LFPs have higher spatial resolution and show weaker response suppression to low spatial frequencies than spiking multiunit activity. These results indicate that LFP recordings are an excellent approach to measure spatial resolution from local populations of neurons in visual cortex including those responsive to color.


Assuntos
Ondas Encefálicas , Percepção de Cores/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Potenciais de Ação , Animais , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Estimulação Luminosa , Campos Visuais/fisiologia
13.
J Neurophysiol ; 112(2): 362-73, 2014 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24790175

RESUMO

Directionally selective (DS) neurons are found in the retina and lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of rabbits and rodents, and in rabbits, LGN DS cells project to primary visual cortex. Here, we compare visual response properties of LGN DS neurons with those of layer 4 simple cells, most of which show strong direction/orientation selectivity. These populations differed dramatically, suggesting that DS cells may not contribute significantly to the synthesis of simple receptive fields: 1) whereas the first harmonic component (F1)-to-mean firing rate (F0) ratios of LGN DS cells are strongly nonlinear, those of simple cells are strongly linear; 2) whereas LGN DS cells have overlapped ON/OFF subfields, simple cells have either a single ON or OFF subfield or two spatially separate subfields; and 3) whereas the preferred directions of LGN DS cells are closely tied to the four cardinal directions, the directional preferences of simple cells are more evenly distributed. We further show that directional selectivity in LGN DS neurons is strongly enhanced by alertness via two mechanisms, 1) an increase in responses to stimulation in the preferred direction, and 2) an enhanced suppression of responses to stimuli moving in the null direction. Finally, our simulations show that these two consequences of alertness could each serve, in a vector-based population code, to hasten the computation of stimulus direction when rabbits become alert.


Assuntos
Corpos Geniculados/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vigília , Animais , Feminino , Corpos Geniculados/citologia , Condução Nervosa , Coelhos , Campos Visuais , Percepção Visual
14.
J Neurosci ; 34(11): 3888-900, 2014 Mar 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24623767

RESUMO

Awake mammals can switch between alert and nonalert brain states hundreds of times per day. Here, we study the effects of alertness on two cell classes in layer 4 of primary visual cortex of awake rabbits: presumptive excitatory "simple" cells and presumptive fast-spike inhibitory neurons (suspected inhibitory interneurons). We show that in both cell classes, alertness increases the strength and greatly enhances the reliability of visual responses. In simple cells, alertness also increases the temporal frequency bandwidth, but preserves contrast sensitivity, orientation tuning, and selectivity for direction and spatial frequency. Finally, alertness selectively suppresses the simple cell responses to high-contrast stimuli and stimuli moving orthogonal to the preferred direction, effectively enhancing mid-contrast borders. Using a population coding model, we show that these effects of alertness in simple cells--enhanced reliability, higher gain, and increased suppression in orthogonal orientation-could play a major role at increasing the speed of cortical feature detection.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Interneurônios/fisiologia , Inibição Neural/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/citologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vigília/fisiologia , Animais , Sensibilidades de Contraste/fisiologia , Feminino , Modelos Lineares , Modelos Neurológicos , Orientação/fisiologia , Coelhos , Vias Visuais/fisiologia
15.
J Neurosci ; 33(28): 11372-89, 2013 Jul 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23843510

RESUMO

Extracellular recordings were obtained from two cell classes in layer 4 of the awake rabbit primary visual cortex (V1): putative inhibitory interneurons [suspected inhibitory interneurons (SINs)] and putative excitatory cells with simple receptive fields. SINs were identified solely by their characteristic response to electrical stimulation of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN, 3+ spikes at >600 Hz), and simple cells were identified solely by receptive field structure, requiring spatially separate ON and/or OFF subfields. Notably, no cells met both criteria, and we studied 62 simple cells and 33 SINs. Fourteen cells met neither criterion. These layer 4 populations were markedly distinct. Thus, SINs were far less linear (F1/F0 < 1), more broadly tuned to stimulus orientation, direction, spatial and temporal frequency, more sensitive to contrast, had much higher spontaneous and stimulus-driven activity, and always had spatially overlapping ON/OFF receptive subfields. SINs responded to drifting gratings with increased firing rates (F0) for all orientations and directions. However, some SINs showed a weaker modulated (F1) response sharply tuned to orientation and/or direction. SINs responded at shorter latencies than simple cells to stationary stimuli, and the responses of both populations could be sustained or transient. Transient simple cells were more sensitive to contrast than sustained simple cells and their visual responses were more frequently suppressed by high contrasts. Finally, cross-correlation between LGN and SIN spike trains confirmed a fast and precisely timed monosynaptic connectivity, supporting the notion that SINs are well suited to provide a fast feedforward inhibition onto targeted cortical populations.


Assuntos
Interneurônios/fisiologia , Inibição Neural/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Córtex Visual/citologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vigília/fisiologia , Animais , Estimulação Elétrica/métodos , Eletrodos Implantados , Feminino , Coelhos
16.
J Neurosci ; 32(33): 11396-413, 2012 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22895722

RESUMO

Recordings from local field potentials (LFPs) are becoming increasingly common in research and clinical applications, but we still have a poor understanding of how LFP stimulus selectivity originates from the combined activity of single neurons. Here, we systematically compared the stimulus selectivity of LFP and neighboring single-unit activity (SUA) recorded in area primary visual cortex (V1) of awake primates. We demonstrate that LFP and SUA have similar stimulus preferences for orientation, direction of motion, contrast, size, temporal frequency, and even spatial phase. However, the average SUA had 50 times better signal-to-noise, 20% higher contrast sensitivity, 45% higher direction selectivity, and 15% more tuning depth than the average LFP. Low LFP frequencies (<30 Hz) were most strongly correlated with the spiking frequencies of neurons with nonlinear spatial summation and poor orientation/direction selectivity that were located near cortical current sinks (negative LFPs). In contrast, LFP gamma frequencies (>30 Hz) were correlated with a more diverse group of neurons located near cortical sources (positive LFPs). In summary, our results indicate that low- and high-frequency LFP pool signals from V1 neurons with similar stimulus preferences but different response properties and cortical depths.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Ondas Encefálicas/fisiologia , Rede Nervosa/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/citologia , Vigília/fisiologia , Animais , Mapeamento Encefálico , Sensibilidades de Contraste , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Microeletrodos , Rede Nervosa/citologia , Orientação , Estimulação Luminosa , Fatores de Tempo
17.
J Neurosci ; 31(48): 17480-7, 2011 Nov 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22131409

RESUMO

The effects of different EEG brain states on spontaneous firing of cortical populations are not well understood. Such state shifts may occur frequently under natural conditions, and baseline firing patterns can impact neural coding (e.g., signal-to-noise ratios, sparseness of coding). Here, we examine the effects of spontaneous transitions from alert to nonalert awake EEG states in the rabbit visual cortex (5 s before and after the state-shifts). In layer 4, we examined putative spiny neurons and fast-spike GABAergic interneurons; in layer 5, we examined corticotectal neurons. We also examined the behavior of retinotopically aligned dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) neurons, usually recorded simultaneously with the above cortical populations. Despite markedly reduced firing and sharply increased bursting in the LGNd neurons following the transition to the nonalert state, little change occurred in the spiny neurons of layer 4. However, fast-spike neurons of layer 4 showed a paradoxical increase in firing rates as thalamic drive decreased in the nonalert state, even though some of these cells received potent monosynaptic input from the same LGNd neurons whose rates were reduced. The firing rates of corticotectal neurons of layer 5, similarly to spiny cells of layer 4, were not state-dependent, but these cells did become more bursty in the nonalert state, as did the fast-spike cells. These results show that spontaneous firing rates of midlayer spiny populations are remarkably conserved following the shift from alert to nonalert states, despite marked reductions in excitatory thalamic drive and increased activity in local fast-spike inhibitory interneurons.


Assuntos
Nível de Alerta/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Animais , Feminino , Corpos Geniculados/fisiologia , Coelhos , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Vigília/fisiologia
18.
J Neurosci ; 31(48): 17471-9, 2011 Nov 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22131408

RESUMO

ON and OFF visual pathways originate in the retina at the synapse between photoreceptor and bipolar cells. OFF bipolar cells are shorter in length and use receptors with faster kinetics than ON bipolar cells and, therefore, process information faster. Here, we demonstrate that this temporal advantage is maintained through thalamocortical processing, with OFF visual responses reaching cortex ~3-6 ms before ON visual responses. Faster OFF visual responses could be demonstrated in recordings from large populations of cat thalamic neurons representing the center of vision (both X and Y) and from subpopulations making connection with the same cortical orientation column. While the OFF temporal advantage diminished as visual responses reached their peak, the integral of the impulse response was greater in OFF than ON neurons. Given the stimulus preferences from OFF and ON channels, our results indicate that darks are processed faster than lights in the thalamocortical pathway.


Assuntos
Neurônios/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Animais , Gatos , Estimulação Luminosa , Células Fotorreceptoras/fisiologia , Retina/fisiologia , Células Bipolares da Retina/fisiologia
19.
Nat Neurosci ; 14(2): 232-8, 2011 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21217765

RESUMO

The primary visual cortex of primates and carnivores is organized into columns of neurons with similar preferences for stimulus orientation, but the developmental origin and function of this organization are still matters of debate. We found that the orientation preference of a cortical column is closely related to the population receptive field of its ON and OFF thalamic inputs. The receptive field scatter from the thalamic inputs was more limited than previously thought and matched the average receptive field size of neurons at the input layers of cortex. Moreover, the thalamic population receptive field (calculated as ON - OFF average) had separate ON and OFF subregions, similar to cortical neurons in layer 4, and provided an accurate prediction of the preferred orientation of the column. These results support developmental models of orientation maps that are based on the receptive field arrangement of ON and OFF visual inputs to cortex.


Assuntos
Neurônios/fisiologia , Orientação/fisiologia , Tálamo/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Animais , Gatos , Distribuição de Qui-Quadrado , Eletrodos Implantados , Eletrofisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Estimulação Luminosa , Campos Visuais/fisiologia
20.
J Vis ; 9(9): 12.1-17, 2009 Aug 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19761345

RESUMO

Neurons in primary visual cortex (V1) are frequently classified based on their response linearity: the extent to which their visual responses to drifting gratings resemble a linear replica of the stimulus. This classification is supported by the finding that response linearity is bimodally distributed across neurons in area V1 of anesthetized animals. However, recent studies suggest that such bimodal distribution may not reflect two neuronal types but a nonlinear relationship between the membrane potential and the spike output. A main limitation of these previous studies is that they measured response linearity in anesthetized animals, where the distance between the neuronal membrane potential and the spike threshold is artificially increased by anesthesia. Here, we measured V1 response linearity in the awake brain and its correlation with the neuronal spontaneous firing rate, which is related to the distance between membrane potential and threshold. Our results demonstrate that response linearity is bimodally distributed in awake V1 but that it is poorly correlated with spontaneous firing rate. In contrast, the spontaneous firing rate is best correlated to the response selectivity and response latency to stimuli.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Vigília/fisiologia , Animais , Sensibilidades de Contraste/fisiologia , Eletrofisiologia , Macaca mulatta , Neurônios/fisiologia , Distribuição Normal , Orientação/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Tempo de Reação/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/citologia
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