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1.
Cell Rep ; 42(12): 113532, 2023 12 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38064338

RESUMO

Sensory cortical areas are organized into topographic maps representing the sensory epithelium. Interareal projections typically connect topographically matched subregions across areas. Because matched subregions process the same stimulus, their interaction is central to many computations. Here, we ask how topographically matched subregions of primary and secondary vibrissal somatosensory cortices (vS1 and vS2) interact during active touch. Volumetric calcium imaging in mice palpating an object with two whiskers revealed a sparse population of highly responsive, broadly tuned touch neurons especially pronounced in layer 2 of both areas. These rare neurons exhibited elevated synchrony and carried most touch-evoked activity in both directions. Lesioning the subregion of either area responding to the spared whiskers degraded touch responses in the unlesioned area, with whisker-specific vS1 lesions degrading whisker-specific vS2 touch responses. Thus, a sparse population of broadly tuned touch neurons dominates vS1-vS2 communication in both directions, and topographically matched vS1 and vS2 subregions recurrently amplify whisker touch activity.


Assuntos
Percepção do Tato , Tato , Camundongos , Animais , Tato/fisiologia , Percepção do Tato/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Somatossensorial/fisiologia , Vibrissas/fisiologia , Estimulação Física
2.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Sep 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37790362

RESUMO

Touch information is central to sensorimotor integration, yet little is known about how cortical touch and movement representations interact. Touch- and movement-related activity is present in both somatosensory and motor cortices, making both candidate sites for touch-motor interactions. We studied touch-motor interactions in layer 2/3 of the primary vibrissal somatosensory and motor cortices of behaving mice. Volumetric two-photon calcium imaging revealed robust responses to whisker touch, whisking, and licking in both areas. Touch activity was dominated by a sparse population of broadly tuned neurons responsive to multiple whiskers that exhibited longitudinal stability and disproportionately influenced interareal communication. Movement representations were similarly dominated by sparse, stable, reciprocally projecting populations. In both areas, many broadly tuned touch cells also produced robust licking or whisking responses. These touch-licking and touch-whisking neurons showed distinct dynamics suggestive of specific roles in shaping movement. Cortical touch-motor interactions are thus mediated by specialized populations of highly responsive, broadly tuned neurons.

3.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3860, 2023 06 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37385989

RESUMO

Sensory cortical representations can be highly dynamic, raising the question of how representational stability impacts learning. We train mice to discriminate the number of photostimulation pulses delivered to opsin-expressing pyramidal neurons in layer 2/3 of primary vibrissal somatosensory cortex. We simultaneously track evoked neural activity across learning using volumetric two-photon calcium imaging. In well-trained animals, trial-to-trial fluctuations in the amount of photostimulus-evoked activity predicted animal choice. Population activity levels declined rapidly across training, with the most active neurons showing the largest declines in responsiveness. Mice learned at varied rates, with some failing to learn the task in the time provided. The photoresponsive population showed greater instability both within and across behavioral sessions among animals that failed to learn. Animals that failed to learn also exhibited a faster deterioration in stimulus decoding. Thus, greater stability in the stimulus response is associated with learning in a sensory cortical microstimulation task.


Assuntos
Aprendizagem , Órgãos dos Sentidos , Animais , Camundongos , Cálcio , Neurônios , Opsinas
4.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37333308

RESUMO

Sensory cortical areas are often organized into topographic maps which represent the sensory epithelium1,2. Individual areas are richly interconnected3, in many cases via reciprocal projections that respect the topography of the underlying map4,5. Because topographically matched cortical patches process the same stimulus, their interaction is likely central to many neural computations6-10. Here, we ask how topographically matched subregions of primary and secondary vibrissal somatosensory cortices (vS1 and vS2) interact during whisker touch. In the mouse, whisker touch-responsive neurons are topographically organized in both vS1 and vS2. Both areas receive thalamic touch input and are topographically interconnected4. Volumetric calcium imaging in mice actively palpating an object with two whiskers revealed a sparse population of highly active, broadly tuned touch neurons responsive to both whiskers. These neurons were especially pronounced in superficial layer 2 in both areas. Despite their rarity, these neurons served as the main conduits of touch-evoked activity between vS1 and vS2 and exhibited elevated synchrony. Focal lesions of the whisker touch-responsive region in vS1 or vS2 degraded touch responses in the unlesioned area, with whisker-specific vS1 lesions degrading whisker-specific vS2 touch responses. Thus, a sparse and superficial population of broadly tuned touch neurons recurrently amplifies touch responses across vS1 and vS2.

5.
Curr Biol ; 33(9): 1765-1777.e5, 2023 05 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37130521

RESUMO

Cortical activity patterns occupy a small subset of possible network states. If this is due to intrinsic network properties, microstimulation of sensory cortex should evoke activity patterns resembling those observed during natural sensory input. Here, we use optical microstimulation of virally transfected layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons in the mouse primary vibrissal somatosensory cortex to compare artificially evoked activity with natural activity evoked by whisker touch and movement ("whisking"). We find that photostimulation engages touch- but not whisking-responsive neurons more than expected by chance. Neurons that respond to photostimulation and touch or to touch alone exhibit higher spontaneous pairwise correlations than purely photoresponsive neurons. Exposure to several days of simultaneous touch and optogenetic stimulation raises both overlap and spontaneous activity correlations among touch and photoresponsive neurons. We thus find that cortical microstimulation engages existing cortical representations and that repeated co-presentation of natural and artificial stimulation enhances this effect.


Assuntos
Córtex Somatossensorial , Percepção do Tato , Camundongos , Animais , Córtex Somatossensorial/fisiologia , Lobo Parietal , Movimento/fisiologia , Tato , Vibrissas/fisiologia
6.
eNeuro ; 9(6)2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36316120

RESUMO

Primary sensory cortices display functional topography, suggesting that even small cortical volumes may underpin perception of specific stimuli. Traditional loss-of-function approaches have a relatively large radius of effect (>1 mm), and few studies track recovery following loss-of-function perturbations. Consequently, the behavioral necessity of smaller cortical volumes remains unclear. In the mouse primary vibrissal somatosensory cortex (vS1), "barrels" with a radius of ∼150 µm receive input predominantly from a single whisker, partitioning vS1 into a topographic map of well defined columns. Here, we train animals implanted with a cranial window over vS1 to perform single-whisker perceptual tasks. We then use high-power laser exposure centered on the barrel representing the spared whisker to produce lesions with a typical volume of one to two barrels. These columnar-scale lesions impair performance in an object location discrimination task for multiple days without disrupting vibrissal kinematics. Animals with degraded location discrimination performance can immediately perform a whisker touch detection task with high accuracy. Animals trained de novo on both simple and complex whisker touch detection tasks showed no permanent behavioral deficits following columnar-scale lesions. Thus, columnar-scale lesions permanently degrade performance in object location discrimination tasks.


Assuntos
Córtex Somatossensorial , Percepção do Tato , Camundongos , Animais , Vibrissas , Tato , Córtex Cerebral
7.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 5484, 2022 09 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36123376

RESUMO

Sensory input arrives from thalamus in cortical layer (L) 4, which outputs predominantly to superficial layers. L4 to L2 thus constitutes one of the earliest cortical feedforward networks. Despite extensive study, the transformation performed by this network remains poorly understood. We use two-photon calcium imaging to record neural activity in L2-4 of primary vibrissal somatosensory cortex (vS1) as mice perform an object localization task with two whiskers. Touch responses sparsen and become more reliable from L4 to L2, with nearly half of the superficial touch response confined to ~1 % of excitatory neurons. These highly responsive neurons have broad receptive fields and can more accurately decode stimulus features. They participate disproportionately in ensembles, small subnetworks with elevated pairwise correlations. Thus, from L4 to L2, cortex transitions from distributed probabilistic coding to sparse and robust ensemble-based coding, resulting in more efficient and accurate representations.


Assuntos
Córtex Somatossensorial , Percepção do Tato , Animais , Cálcio , Camundongos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Somatossensorial/fisiologia , Vibrissas/fisiologia
8.
Nature ; 579(7798): 256-259, 2020 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32132709

RESUMO

Most cortical synapses are local and excitatory. Local recurrent circuits could implement amplification, allowing pattern completion and other computations1-4. Cortical circuits contain subnetworks that consist of neurons with similar receptive fields and increased connectivity relative to the network average5,6. Cortical neurons that encode different types of information are spatially intermingled and distributed over large brain volumes5-7, and this complexity has hindered attempts to probe the function of these subnetworks by perturbing them individually8. Here we use computational modelling, optical recordings and manipulations to probe the function of recurrent coupling in layer 2/3 of the mouse vibrissal somatosensory cortex during active tactile discrimination. A neural circuit model of layer 2/3 revealed that recurrent excitation enhances sensory signals by amplification, but only for subnetworks with increased connectivity. Model networks with high amplification were sensitive to damage: loss of a few members of the subnetwork degraded stimulus encoding. We tested this prediction by mapping neuronal selectivity7 and photoablating9,10 neurons with specific selectivity. Ablation of a small proportion of layer 2/3 neurons (10-20, less than 5% of the total) representing touch markedly reduced responses in the spared touch representation, but not in other representations. Ablations most strongly affected neurons with stimulus responses that were similar to those of the ablated population, which is also consistent with network models. Recurrence among cortical neurons with similar selectivity therefore drives input-specific amplification during behaviour.


Assuntos
Modelos Neurológicos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Somatossensorial/fisiologia , Animais , Simulação por Computador , Camundongos , Tato/fisiologia
9.
Neuron ; 88(4): 629-34, 2015 Nov 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26590340

RESUMO

The Neurodata Without Borders (NWB) initiative promotes data standardization in neuroscience to increase research reproducibility and opportunities. In the first NWB pilot project, neurophysiologists and software developers produced a common data format for recordings and metadata of cellular electrophysiology and optical imaging experiments. The format specification, application programming interfaces, and sample datasets have been released.


Assuntos
Disseminação de Informação/métodos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/normas , Neurofisiologia , Design de Software , Humanos , Neurociências , Projetos Piloto , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Projetos de Pesquisa/normas , Software
10.
Curr Opin Neurobiol ; 32: 115-23, 2015 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25880117

RESUMO

Neural computations are implemented by activity in spatially distributed neural circuits. Cellular imaging fills a unique niche in linking activity of specific types of neurons to behavior, over spatial scales spanning single neurons to entire brain regions, and temporal scales from milliseconds to months. Imaging may soon make it possible to track activity of all neurons in a brain region, such as a cortical column. We review recent methodological advances that facilitate optical imaging of neuronal populations in vivo, with an emphasis on calcium imaging using protein indicators in mice. We point out areas that are particularly ripe for future developments.


Assuntos
Cálcio/metabolismo , Córtex Cerebral/fisiologia , Rede Nervosa/fisiologia , Neuroimagem/métodos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Imagem Óptica/métodos , Animais
11.
Neuron ; 86(3): 783-99, 2015 May 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25913859

RESUMO

Comprehensive measurement of neural activity remains challenging due to the large numbers of neurons in each brain area. We used volumetric two-photon imaging in mice expressing GCaMP6s and nuclear red fluorescent proteins to sample activity in 75% of superficial barrel cortex neurons across the relevant cortical columns, approximately 12,000 neurons per animal, during performance of a single whisker object localization task. Task-related activity peaked during object palpation. An encoding model related activity to behavioral variables. In the column corresponding to the spared whisker, 300 layer (L) 2/3 pyramidal neurons (17%) each encoded touch and whisker movements. Touch representation declined by half in surrounding columns; whisker movement representation was unchanged. Following the emergence of stereotyped task-related movement, sensory representations showed no measurable plasticity. Touch direction was topographically organized, with distinct organization for passive and active touch. Our work reveals sparse and spatially intermingled representations of multiple tactile features. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Assuntos
Vias Aferentes/fisiologia , Mapeamento Encefálico , Córtex Somatossensorial/fisiologia , Tato/fisiologia , Vibrissas/inervação , Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Animais , Cálcio/metabolismo , Comportamento Exploratório/fisiologia , Glutamato Descarboxilase/genética , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Proteínas Luminescentes/genética , Proteínas Luminescentes/metabolismo , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Modelos Neurológicos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Dinâmica não Linear , Optogenética , Orientação , RNA não Traduzido/genética , RNA não Traduzido/metabolismo , Córtex Somatossensorial/citologia
12.
PLoS One ; 9(2): e88678, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24520413

RESUMO

The mouse is an increasingly prominent model for the analysis of mammalian neuronal circuits. Neural circuits ultimately have to be probed during behaviors that engage the circuits. Linking circuit dynamics to behavior requires precise control of sensory stimuli and measurement of body movements. Head-fixation has been used for behavioral research, particularly in non-human primates, to facilitate precise stimulus control, behavioral monitoring and neural recording. However, choice-based, perceptual decision tasks by head-fixed mice have only recently been introduced. Training mice relies on motivating mice using water restriction. Here we describe procedures for head-fixation, water restriction and behavioral training for head-fixed mice, with a focus on active, whisker-based tactile behaviors. In these experiments mice had restricted access to water (typically 1 ml/day). After ten days of water restriction, body weight stabilized at approximately 80% of initial weight. At that point mice were trained to discriminate sensory stimuli using operant conditioning. Head-fixed mice reported stimuli by licking in go/no-go tasks and also using a forced choice paradigm using a dual lickport. In some cases mice learned to discriminate sensory stimuli in a few trials within the first behavioral session. Delay epochs lasting a second or more were used to separate sensation (e.g. tactile exploration) and action (i.e. licking). Mice performed a variety of perceptual decision tasks with high performance for hundreds of trials per behavioral session. Up to four months of continuous water restriction showed no adverse health effects. Behavioral performance correlated with the degree of water restriction, supporting the importance of controlling access to water. These behavioral paradigms can be combined with cellular resolution imaging, random access photostimulation, and whole cell recordings.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Etologia/métodos , Animais , Peso Corporal , Discriminação Psicológica , Cabeça , Humanos , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Recompensa , Sacarose , Análise e Desempenho de Tarefas , Água , Privação de Água
13.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 8(7): e1002591, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22792058

RESUMO

We have developed software for fully automated tracking of vibrissae (whiskers) in high-speed videos (>500 Hz) of head-fixed, behaving rodents trimmed to a single row of whiskers. Performance was assessed against a manually curated dataset consisting of 1.32 million video frames comprising 4.5 million whisker traces. The current implementation detects whiskers with a recall of 99.998% and identifies individual whiskers with 99.997% accuracy. The average processing rate for these images was 8 Mpx/s/cpu (2.6 GHz Intel Core2, 2 GB RAM). This translates to 35 processed frames per second for a 640 px×352 px video of 4 whiskers. The speed and accuracy achieved enables quantitative behavioral studies where the analysis of millions of video frames is required. We used the software to analyze the evolving whisking strategies as mice learned a whisker-based detection task over the course of 6 days (8148 trials, 25 million frames) and measure the forces at the sensory follicle that most underlie haptic perception.


Assuntos
Biologia Computacional/métodos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Vibrissas/fisiologia , Gravação de Videoteipe/métodos , Animais , Comportamento Exploratório/fisiologia , Camundongos
15.
Neuron ; 67(6): 1048-61, 2010 Sep 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20869600

RESUMO

Classical studies have related the spiking of selected neocortical neurons to behavior, but little is known about activity sampled from the entire neural population. We recorded from neurons selected independent of spiking, using cell-attached recordings and two-photon calcium imaging, in the barrel cortex of mice performing an object localization task. Spike rates varied across neurons, from silence to >60 Hz. Responses were diverse, with some neurons showing large increases in spike rate when whiskers contacted the object. Nearly half the neurons discriminated object location; a small fraction of neurons discriminated perfectly. More active neurons were more discriminative. Layer (L) 4 and L5 contained the highest fractions of discriminating neurons (∼63% and 79%, respectively), but a few L2/3 neurons were also highly discriminating. Approximately 13,000 spikes per activated barrel column were available to mice for decision making. Coding of object location in the barrel cortex is therefore highly redundant.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Mapeamento Encefálico , Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Somatossensorial/citologia , Vibrissas/fisiologia , Vias Aferentes/fisiologia , Animais , Comportamento Animal , Cálcio/metabolismo , Discriminação Psicológica , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Modelos Biológicos , Estimulação Física/métodos , Curva ROC
16.
Neuron ; 63(6): 830-42, 2009 Sep 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19778511

RESUMO

The Lobula Giant Movement Detector (LGMD) is a higher-order visual interneuron of Orthopteran insects that responds preferentially to objects approaching on a collision course. It receives excitatory input from an entire visual hemifield that anatomical evidence suggests is retinotopic. We show that this excitatory projection activates calcium-permeable nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. In vivo calcium imaging reveals that the excitatory projection preserves retinotopy down to the level of a single ommatidium. Examining the impact of retinotopy on the LGMD's computational properties, we show that sublinear synaptic summation can explain orientation preference in this cell. Exploring retinotopy's impact on directional selectivity leads us to infer that the excitatory input to the LGMD is intrinsically directionally selective. Our results show that precise retinotopy has implications for the dendritic integration of visual information in a single neuron.


Assuntos
Dendritos/fisiologia , Interneurônios/citologia , Interneurônios/fisiologia , Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Acetilcolina/farmacologia , Potenciais de Ação , Animais , Cálcio/metabolismo , Simulação por Computador , Dendritos/metabolismo , Feminino , Gafanhotos , Interneurônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Modelos Neurológicos , Rede Nervosa , Inibição Neural , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Terminações Pré-Sinápticas/fisiologia , Receptores Nicotínicos/fisiologia , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia , Campos Visuais , Vias Visuais/efeitos dos fármacos
17.
Biol Cybern ; 100(6): 505-20, 2009 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19381681

RESUMO

Spike-frequency adaptation is the reduction of a neuron's firing rate to a stimulus of constant intensity. In the locust, the Lobula Giant Movement Detector (LGMD) is a visual interneuron that exhibits rapid adaptation to both current injection and visual stimuli. Here, a reduced compartmental model of the LGMD is employed to explore adaptation's role in selectivity for stimuli whose intensity changes with time. We show that supralinearly increasing current injection stimuli are best at driving a high spike count in the response, while linearly increasing current injection stimuli (i.e., ramps) are best at attaining large firing rate changes in an adapting neuron. This result is extended with in vivo experiments showing that the LGMD's response to translating stimuli having a supralinear velocity profile is larger than the response to constant or linearly increasing velocity translation. Furthermore, we show that the LGMD's preference for approaching versus receding stimuli can partly be accounted for by adaptation. Finally, we show that the LGMD's adaptation mechanism appears well tuned to minimize sensitivity for the level of basal input.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Células Receptoras Sensoriais/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Animais , Modelos Neurológicos , Estimulação Luminosa , Fatores de Tempo
18.
Nat Neurosci ; 12(3): 318-26, 2009 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19198607

RESUMO

How active membrane conductance dynamics tunes neurons for specific time-varying stimuli remains poorly understood. We studied the biophysical mechanisms by which spike frequency adaptation shapes visual stimulus selectivity in an identified visual interneuron of the locust. The lobula giant movement detector (LGMD) responds preferentially to objects approaching on a collision course with the locust. Using calcium imaging, pharmacology and modeling, we show that spike frequency adaptation in the LGMD is mediated by a Ca(2+)-dependent potassium conductance closely resembling those associated with 'small-conductance' (SK) channels. Intracellular block of this conductance minimally affected the LGMD's response to approaching stimuli, but substantially increased its response to translating ones. Thus, spike frequency adaptation contributes to the neuron's tuning by selectively decreasing its responses to nonpreferred stimuli. Our results identify a new mechanism by which spike frequency adaptation may tune visual neurons to behaviorally relevant stimuli.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Animais , Feminino , Gafanhotos , Neurônios/química , Fatores de Tempo
19.
J Neurophysiol ; 97(1): 159-77, 2007 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17021031

RESUMO

The lobula giant movement detector (LGMD) is a visual interneuron of Orthopteran insects involved in collision avoidance and escape behavior. The LGMD possesses a large dendritic field thought to receive excitatory, retinotopic projections from the entire compound eye. We investigated whether the LGMD's receptive field for local motion stimuli can be explained by its electrotonic structure and the eye's anisotropic sampling of visual space. Five locust (Schistocerca americana) LGMD neurons were stained and reconstructed. We show that the excitatory dendritic field and eye can be fitted by ellipsoids having similar geometries. A passive compartmental model fit to electrophysiological data was used to demonstrate that the LGMD is not electrotonically compact. We derived a spike rate to membrane potential transform using intracellular recordings under visual stimulation, allowing direct comparison between experimental and simulated receptive field properties. By assuming a retinotopic mapping giving equal weight to each ommatidium and equally spaced synapses, the model reproduced the experimental data along the eye equator, though it failed to reproduce the receptive field along the ventral-dorsal axis. Our results illustrate how interactions between the distribution of synaptic inputs and the electrotonic properties of neurons contribute to shaping their receptive fields.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Gafanhotos/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Lobo Óptico de Animais não Mamíferos/fisiologia , Sinapses/fisiologia , Transmissão Sináptica/fisiologia , Animais , Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Membrana Celular/fisiologia , Dendritos/fisiologia , Dendritos/ultraestrutura , Feminino , Gafanhotos/citologia , Citometria por Imagem , Isoquinolinas , Potenciais da Membrana/fisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Neurônios/citologia , Lobo Óptico de Animais não Mamíferos/citologia , Retina/citologia , Retina/fisiologia , Sinapses/ultraestrutura , Campos Visuais/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia
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