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1.
Cell ; 186(3): 543-559.e19, 2023 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36669484

ABSTRACT

Learning has been associated with modifications of synaptic and circuit properties, but the precise changes storing information in mammals have remained largely unclear. We combined genetically targeted voltage imaging with targeted optogenetic activation and silencing of pre- and post-synaptic neurons to study the mechanisms underlying hippocampal behavioral timescale plasticity. In mice navigating a virtual-reality environment, targeted optogenetic activation of individual CA1 cells at specific places induced stable representations of these places in the targeted cells. Optical elicitation, recording, and modulation of synaptic transmission in behaving mice revealed that activity in presynaptic CA2/3 cells was required for the induction of plasticity in CA1 and, furthermore, that during induction of these place fields in single CA1 cells, synaptic input from CA2/3 onto these same cells was potentiated. These results reveal synaptic implementation of hippocampal behavioral timescale plasticity and define a methodology to resolve synaptic plasticity during learning and memory in behaving mammals.


Subject(s)
CA1 Region, Hippocampal , Hippocampus , Mice , Animals , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Learning/physiology , Neurons , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Mammals
2.
Cell ; 186(20): 4325-4344.e26, 2023 09 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37652010

ABSTRACT

KCR channelrhodopsins (K+-selective light-gated ion channels) have received attention as potential inhibitory optogenetic tools but more broadly pose a fundamental mystery regarding how their K+ selectivity is achieved. Here, we present 2.5-2.7 Å cryo-electron microscopy structures of HcKCR1 and HcKCR2 and of a structure-guided mutant with enhanced K+ selectivity. Structural, electrophysiological, computational, spectroscopic, and biochemical analyses reveal a distinctive mechanism for K+ selectivity; rather than forming the symmetrical filter of canonical K+ channels achieving both selectivity and dehydration, instead, three extracellular-vestibule residues within each monomer form a flexible asymmetric selectivity gate, while a distinct dehydration pathway extends intracellularly. Structural comparisons reveal a retinal-binding pocket that induces retinal rotation (accounting for HcKCR1/HcKCR2 spectral differences), and design of corresponding KCR variants with increased K+ selectivity (KALI-1/KALI-2) provides key advantages for optogenetic inhibition in vitro and in vivo. Thus, discovery of a mechanism for ion-channel K+ selectivity also provides a framework for next-generation optogenetics.


Subject(s)
Channelrhodopsins , Rhinosporidium , Humans , Channelrhodopsins/chemistry , Channelrhodopsins/genetics , Channelrhodopsins/metabolism , Channelrhodopsins/ultrastructure , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Ion Channels , Potassium/metabolism , Rhinosporidium/chemistry
3.
Cell ; 185(4): 654-671.e22, 2022 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35065713

ABSTRACT

Sex hormones exert a profound influence on gendered behaviors. How individual sex hormone-responsive neuronal populations regulate diverse sex-typical behaviors is unclear. We performed orthogonal, genetically targeted sequencing of four estrogen receptor 1-expressing (Esr1+) populations and identified 1,415 genes expressed differentially between sexes or estrous states. Unique subsets of these genes were distributed across all 137 transcriptomically defined Esr1+ cell types, including estrous stage-specific ones, that comprise the four populations. We used differentially expressed genes labeling single Esr1+ cell types as entry points to functionally characterize two such cell types, BNSTprTac1/Esr1 and VMHvlCckar/Esr1. We observed that these two cell types, but not the other Esr1+ cell types in these populations, are essential for sex recognition in males and mating in females, respectively. Furthermore, VMHvlCckar/Esr1 cell type projections are distinct from those of other VMHvlEsr1 cell types. Together, projection and functional specialization of dimorphic cell types enables sex hormone-responsive populations to regulate diverse social behaviors.


Subject(s)
Estrous Cycle/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation , Sex Characteristics , Sexual Behavior, Animal/physiology , Aggression , Animals , Aromatase/metabolism , Autistic Disorder/genetics , Estrogen Receptor alpha/genetics , Estrogen Receptor alpha/metabolism , Female , Gene Expression Profiling , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Neurons/metabolism , Social Behavior
4.
Cell ; 185(19): 3568-3587.e27, 2022 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36113428

ABSTRACT

Computational analysis of cellular activity has developed largely independently of modern transcriptomic cell typology, but integrating these approaches may be essential for full insight into cellular-level mechanisms underlying brain function and dysfunction. Applying this approach to the habenula (a structure with diverse, intermingled molecular, anatomical, and computational features), we identified encoding of reward-predictive cues and reward outcomes in distinct genetically defined neural populations, including TH+ cells and Tac1+ cells. Data from genetically targeted recordings were used to train an optimized nonlinear dynamical systems model and revealed activity dynamics consistent with a line attractor. High-density, cell-type-specific electrophysiological recordings and optogenetic perturbation provided supporting evidence for this model. Reverse-engineering predicted how Tac1+ cells might integrate reward history, which was complemented by in vivo experimentation. This integrated approach describes a process by which data-driven computational models of population activity can generate and frame actionable hypotheses for cell-type-specific investigation in biological systems.


Subject(s)
Habenula , Reward , Population Dynamics
5.
Cell ; 185(4): 672-689.e23, 2022 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35114111

ABSTRACT

ChRmine, a recently discovered pump-like cation-conducting channelrhodopsin, exhibits puzzling properties (large photocurrents, red-shifted spectrum, and extreme light sensitivity) that have created new opportunities in optogenetics. ChRmine and its homologs function as ion channels but, by primary sequence, more closely resemble ion pump rhodopsins; mechanisms for passive channel conduction in this family have remained mysterious. Here, we present the 2.0 Å resolution cryo-EM structure of ChRmine, revealing architectural features atypical for channelrhodopsins: trimeric assembly, a short transmembrane-helix 3, a twisting extracellular-loop 1, large vestibules within the monomer, and an opening at the trimer interface. We applied this structure to design three proteins (rsChRmine and hsChRmine, conferring further red-shifted and high-speed properties, respectively, and frChRmine, combining faster and more red-shifted performance) suitable for fundamental neuroscience opportunities. These results illuminate the conduction and gating of pump-like channelrhodopsins and point the way toward further structure-guided creation of channelrhodopsins for applications across biology.


Subject(s)
Channelrhodopsins/chemistry , Channelrhodopsins/metabolism , Ion Channel Gating , Animals , Channelrhodopsins/ultrastructure , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Female , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Molecular , Optogenetics , Phylogeny , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Schiff Bases/chemistry , Sf9 Cells , Structure-Activity Relationship
6.
Cell ; 184(21): 5279-5285, 2021 10 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34562367

ABSTRACT

On the occasion of the 2021 Lasker Basic Medical Research Award to Karl Deisseroth, Peter Hegemann, and Dieter Oesterhelt (for "the discovery of light-sensitive microbial proteins that can activate or deactivate individual brain cells-leading to the development of optogenetics and revolutionizing neuroscience"), Deisseroth reflects on this international collaboration, his basic mechanistic and structural discoveries regarding microbial channels that transduce photons into ion current, the causal exploration of brain cell function, and the pressing mysteries of psychiatry.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Emotions , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Bacteriorhodopsins/metabolism , Channelrhodopsins/metabolism , Humans , Optogenetics , Purple Membrane/metabolism
7.
Cell ; 184(3): 741-758.e17, 2021 02 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33484631

ABSTRACT

Both transcription and three-dimensional (3D) architecture of the mammalian genome play critical roles in neurodevelopment and its disorders. However, 3D genome structures of single brain cells have not been solved; little is known about the dynamics of single-cell transcriptome and 3D genome after birth. Here, we generated a transcriptome (3,517 cells) and 3D genome (3,646 cells) atlas of the developing mouse cortex and hippocampus by using our high-resolution multiple annealing and looping-based amplification cycles for digital transcriptomics (MALBAC-DT) and diploid chromatin conformation capture (Dip-C) methods and developing multi-omic analysis pipelines. In adults, 3D genome "structure types" delineate all major cell types, with high correlation between chromatin A/B compartments and gene expression. During development, both transcriptome and 3D genome are extensively transformed in the first post-natal month. In neurons, 3D genome is rewired across scales, correlated with gene expression modules, and independent of sensory experience. Finally, we examine allele-specific structure of imprinted genes, revealing local and chromosome (chr)-wide differences. These findings uncover an unknown dimension of neurodevelopment.


Subject(s)
Brain/growth & development , Genome , Sensation/genetics , Transcription, Genetic , Alleles , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Cell Lineage/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Ontology , Gene Regulatory Networks , Genetic Loci , Genomic Imprinting , Mice , Multigene Family , Neuroglia/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Transcriptome/genetics , Visual Cortex/metabolism
8.
Cell ; 184(14): 3731-3747.e21, 2021 07 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34214470

ABSTRACT

In motor neuroscience, state changes are hypothesized to time-lock neural assemblies coordinating complex movements, but evidence for this remains slender. We tested whether a discrete change from more autonomous to coherent spiking underlies skilled movement by imaging cerebellar Purkinje neuron complex spikes in mice making targeted forelimb-reaches. As mice learned the task, millimeter-scale spatiotemporally coherent spiking emerged ipsilateral to the reaching forelimb, and consistent neural synchronization became predictive of kinematic stereotypy. Before reach onset, spiking switched from more disordered to internally time-locked concerted spiking and silence. Optogenetic manipulations of cerebellar feedback to the inferior olive bi-directionally modulated neural synchronization and reaching direction. A simple model explained the reorganization of spiking during reaching as reflecting a discrete bifurcation in olivary network dynamics. These findings argue that to prepare learned movements, olivo-cerebellar circuits enter a self-regulated, synchronized state promoting motor coordination. State changes facilitating behavioral transitions may generalize across neural systems.


Subject(s)
Movement/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Cerebellum/physiology , Cortical Synchronization , Forelimb/physiology , Interneurons/physiology , Learning , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Models, Neurological , Motor Activity/physiology , Olivary Nucleus/physiology , Optogenetics , Purkinje Cells/physiology , Stereotyped Behavior , Task Performance and Analysis
9.
Cell ; 183(7): 2003-2019.e16, 2020 12 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33308478

ABSTRACT

The ability to record transient cellular events in the DNA or RNA of cells would enable precise, large-scale analysis, selection, and reprogramming of heterogeneous cell populations. Here, we report a molecular technology for stable genetic tagging of cells that exhibit activity-related increases in intracellular calcium concentration (FLiCRE). We used FLiCRE to transcriptionally label activated neural ensembles in the nucleus accumbens of the mouse brain during brief stimulation of aversive inputs. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we detected FLiCRE transcripts among the endogenous transcriptome, providing simultaneous readout of both cell-type and calcium activation history. We identified a cell type in the nucleus accumbens activated downstream of long-range excitatory projections. Taking advantage of FLiCRE's modular design, we expressed an optogenetic channel selectively in this cell type and showed that direct recruitment of this otherwise genetically inaccessible population elicits behavioral aversion. The specificity and minute resolution of FLiCRE enables molecularly informed characterization, manipulation, and reprogramming of activated cellular ensembles.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Calcium/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Animals , Female , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Kinetics , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Neurons/metabolism , Optogenetics , Rats , Single-Cell Analysis , Transcriptome/genetics
10.
Cell ; 183(1): 211-227.e20, 2020 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32937106

ABSTRACT

The striosome compartment within the dorsal striatum has been implicated in reinforcement learning and regulation of motivation, but how striosomal neurons contribute to these functions remains elusive. Here, we show that a genetically identified striosomal population, which expresses the Teashirt family zinc finger 1 (Tshz1) and belongs to the direct pathway, drives negative reinforcement and is essential for aversive learning in mice. Contrasting a "conventional" striosomal direct pathway, the Tshz1 neurons cause aversion, movement suppression, and negative reinforcement once activated, and they receive a distinct set of synaptic inputs. These neurons are predominantly excited by punishment rather than reward and represent the anticipation of punishment or the motivation for avoidance. Furthermore, inhibiting these neurons impairs punishment-based learning without affecting reward learning or movement. These results establish a major role of striosomal neurons in behaviors reinforced by punishment and moreover uncover functions of the direct pathway unaccounted for in classic models.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/physiology , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Animals , Basal Ganglia , Female , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Learning/physiology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Motivation , Neurons/physiology , Punishment , Reinforcement, Psychology , Repressor Proteins/metabolism
11.
Cell ; 183(4): 918-934.e49, 2020 11 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33113354

ABSTRACT

Learning valence-based responses to favorable and unfavorable options requires judgments of the relative value of the options, a process necessary for species survival. We found, using engineered mice, that circuit connectivity and function of the striosome compartment of the striatum are critical for this type of learning. Calcium imaging during valence-based learning exhibited a selective correlation between learning and striosomal but not matrix signals. This striosomal activity encoded discrimination learning and was correlated with task engagement, which, in turn, could be regulated by chemogenetic excitation and inhibition. Striosomal function during discrimination learning was disturbed with aging and severely so in a mouse model of Huntington's disease. Anatomical and functional connectivity of parvalbumin-positive, putative fast-spiking interneurons (FSIs) to striatal projection neurons was enhanced in striosomes compared with matrix in mice that learned. Computational modeling of these findings suggests that FSIs can modulate the striosomal signal-to-noise ratio, crucial for discrimination and learning.


Subject(s)
Aging/pathology , Corpus Striatum/pathology , Huntington Disease/pathology , Learning , Action Potentials , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Biomarkers/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/physiopathology , Discrimination Learning , Disease Models, Animal , Huntington Disease/physiopathology , Interneurons/pathology , Mice, Transgenic , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Photometry , Reward , Task Performance and Analysis
12.
Cell ; 177(4): 970-985.e20, 2019 05 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31031000

ABSTRACT

Prolonged behavioral challenges can cause animals to switch from active to passive coping strategies to manage effort-expenditure during stress; such normally adaptive behavioral state transitions can become maladaptive in psychiatric disorders such as depression. The underlying neuronal dynamics and brainwide interactions important for passive coping have remained unclear. Here, we develop a paradigm to study these behavioral state transitions at cellular-resolution across the entire vertebrate brain. Using brainwide imaging in zebrafish, we observed that the transition to passive coping is manifested by progressive activation of neurons in the ventral (lateral) habenula. Activation of these ventral-habenula neurons suppressed downstream neurons in the serotonergic raphe nucleus and caused behavioral passivity, whereas inhibition of these neurons prevented passivity. Data-driven recurrent neural network modeling pointed to altered intra-habenula interactions as a contributory mechanism. These results demonstrate ongoing encoding of experience features in the habenula, which guides recruitment of downstream networks and imposes a passive coping behavioral strategy.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological/physiology , Habenula/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Brain/metabolism , Habenula/metabolism , Larva , Neural Pathways/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Raphe Nuclei/metabolism , Serotonergic Neurons/metabolism , Serotonin , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Zebrafish/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
14.
Cell ; 177(5): 1346-1360.e24, 2019 05 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31080068

ABSTRACT

To decipher dynamic brain information processing, current genetically encoded calcium indicators (GECIs) are limited in single action potential (AP) detection speed, combinatorial spectral compatibility, and two-photon imaging depth. To address this, here, we rationally engineered a next-generation quadricolor GECI suite, XCaMPs. Single AP detection was achieved within 3-10 ms of spike onset, enabling measurements of fast-spike trains in parvalbumin (PV)-positive interneurons in the barrel cortex in vivo and recording three distinct (two inhibitory and one excitatory) ensembles during pre-motion activity in freely moving mice. In vivo paired recording of pre- and postsynaptic firing revealed spatiotemporal constraints of dendritic inhibition in layer 1 in vivo, between axons of somatostatin (SST)-positive interneurons and apical tufts dendrites of excitatory pyramidal neurons. Finally, non-invasive, subcortical imaging using red XCaMP-R uncovered somatosensation-evoked persistent activity in hippocampal CA1 neurons. Thus, the XCaMPs offer a critical enhancement of solution space in studies of complex neuronal circuit dynamics. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Axons/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Hippocampus/metabolism , Interneurons/metabolism , Pyramidal Cells/metabolism , Animals , Cerebral Cortex/cytology , Female , Hippocampus/cytology , Interneurons/cytology , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Pyramidal Cells/cytology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
15.
Cell ; 173(1): 166-180.e14, 2018 03 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29502969

ABSTRACT

Brain-wide fluctuations in local field potential oscillations reflect emergent network-level signals that mediate behavior. Cracking the code whereby these oscillations coordinate in time and space (spatiotemporal dynamics) to represent complex behaviors would provide fundamental insights into how the brain signals emotional pathology. Using machine learning, we discover a spatiotemporal dynamic network that predicts the emergence of major depressive disorder (MDD)-related behavioral dysfunction in mice subjected to chronic social defeat stress. Activity patterns in this network originate in prefrontal cortex and ventral striatum, relay through amygdala and ventral tegmental area, and converge in ventral hippocampus. This network is increased by acute threat, and it is also enhanced in three independent models of MDD vulnerability. Finally, we demonstrate that this vulnerability network is biologically distinct from the networks that encode dysfunction after stress. Thus, these findings reveal a convergent mechanism through which MDD vulnerability is mediated in the brain.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Depression/pathology , Animals , Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2/genetics , Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2/metabolism , Depression/physiopathology , Disease Models, Animal , Electric Stimulation , Electrodes, Implanted , Immunoglobulin G/genetics , Immunoglobulin G/metabolism , Ketamine/pharmacology , Machine Learning , Male , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Physiological Phenomena/drug effects , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Stress, Psychological
16.
Cell ; 171(6): 1411-1423.e17, 2017 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29103613

ABSTRACT

Internal states of the brain profoundly influence behavior. Fluctuating states such as alertness can be governed by neuromodulation, but the underlying mechanisms and cell types involved are not fully understood. We developed a method to globally screen for cell types involved in behavior by integrating brain-wide activity imaging with high-content molecular phenotyping and volume registration at cellular resolution. We used this method (MultiMAP) to record from 22 neuromodulatory cell types in behaving zebrafish during a reaction-time task that reports alertness. We identified multiple monoaminergic, cholinergic, and peptidergic cell types linked to alertness and found that activity in these cell types was mutually correlated during heightened alertness. We next recorded from and controlled homologous neuromodulatory cells in mice; alertness-related cell-type dynamics exhibited striking evolutionary conservation and modulated behavior similarly. These experiments establish a method for unbiased discovery of cellular elements underlying behavior and reveal an evolutionarily conserved set of diverse neuromodulatory systems that collectively govern internal state.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Brain/cytology , Brain/physiology , Neurons/cytology , Animals , Brain Mapping , Larva/cytology , Larva/physiology , Mice , Neural Pathways , Zebrafish/growth & development , Zebrafish/physiology
17.
Cell ; 170(5): 1013-1027.e14, 2017 Aug 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28823561

ABSTRACT

Reward-seeking behavior is fundamental to survival, but suppression of this behavior can be essential as well, even for rewards of high value. In humans and rodents, the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) has been implicated in suppressing reward seeking; however, despite vital significance in health and disease, the neural circuitry through which mPFC regulates reward seeking remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that a specific subset of superficial mPFC projections to a subfield of nucleus accumbens (NAc) neurons naturally encodes the decision to initiate or suppress reward seeking when faced with risk of punishment. A highly resolved subpopulation of these top-down projecting neurons, identified by 2-photon Ca2+ imaging and activity-dependent labeling to recruit the relevant neurons, was found capable of suppressing reward seeking. This natural activity-resolved mPFC-to-NAc projection displayed unique molecular-genetic and microcircuit-level features concordant with a conserved role in the regulation of reward-seeking behavior, providing cellular and anatomical identifiers of behavioral and possible therapeutic significance.


Subject(s)
Reward , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Neural Pathways , Neuroimaging , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Punishment
18.
Cell ; 164(6): 1136-1150, 2016 Mar 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26967281

ABSTRACT

Communication, the effective delivery of information, is fundamental to life across all scales and species. Nervous systems (by necessity) may be most specifically adapted among biological tissues for high rate and complexity of information transmitted, and thus, the properties of neural tissue and principles of its organization into circuits may illuminate capabilities and limitations of biological communication. Here, we consider recent developments in tools for studying neural circuits with particular attention to defining neuronal cell types by input and output information streams--i.e., by how they communicate. Complementing approaches that define cell types by virtue of genetic promoter/enhancer properties, this communication-based approach to defining cell types operationally by input/output (I/O) relationships links structure and function, resolves difficulties associated with single-genetic-feature definitions, leverages technology for observing and testing significance of precisely these I/O relationships in intact brains, and maps onto processes through which behavior may be adapted during development, experience, and evolution.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Neural Pathways , Signal Transduction , Animals , Humans , Optogenetics , Protein Interaction Maps , Synapses
19.
Cell ; 165(3): 524-34, 2016 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27104976

ABSTRACT

Optogenetic methodology enables direct targeting of specific neural circuit elements for inhibition or excitation while spanning timescales from the acute (milliseconds) to the chronic (many days or more). Although the impact of this temporal versatility and cellular specificity has been greater for basic science than clinical research, it is natural to ask whether the dynamic patterns of neural circuit activity discovered to be causal in adaptive or maladaptive behaviors could become targets for treatment of neuropsychiatric diseases. Here, we consider the landscape of ideas related to therapeutic targeting of circuit dynamics. Specifically, we highlight optical, ultrasonic, and magnetic concepts for the targeted control of neural activity, preclinical/clinical discovery opportunities, and recently reported optogenetically guided clinical outcomes.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Neural Pathways , Optogenetics/methods , Animals , Brain/cytology , Electromagnetic Phenomena , Humans , Neurons/physiology , Opsins/physiology
20.
Cell ; 164(1-2): 208-218, 2016 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26771492

ABSTRACT

While signatures of attention have been extensively studied in sensory systems, the neural sources and computations responsible for top-down control of attention are largely unknown. Using chronic recordings in mice, we found that fast-spiking parvalbumin (FS-PV) interneurons in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) uniformly show increased and sustained firing during goal-driven attentional processing, correlating to the level of attention. Elevated activity of FS-PV neurons on the timescale of seconds predicted successful execution of behavior. Successful allocation of attention was characterized by strong synchronization of FS-PV neurons, increased gamma oscillations, and phase locking of pyramidal firing. Phase-locked pyramidal neurons showed gamma-phase-dependent rate modulation during successful attentional processing. Optogenetic silencing of FS-PV neurons deteriorated attentional processing, while optogenetic synchronization of FS-PV neurons at gamma frequencies had pro-cognitive effects and improved goal-directed behavior. FS-PV neurons thus act as a functional unit coordinating the activity in the local mPFC circuit during goal-driven attentional processing.


Subject(s)
Attention , Neurons/cytology , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Cognition , Gamma Rhythm , Mice , Optogenetics , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology
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