Literature DB >> 17182787

Cross-whisker adaptation of neurons in the rat barrel cortex.

Yonatan Katz1, Jaime E Heiss, Ilan Lampl.   

Abstract

Neurons in the barrel cortex and the thalamus respond preferentially to stimulation of one whisker (the principal whisker) and weakly to several adjacent whiskers. Cortical neurons, unlike thalamic cells, gradually adapt to repeated whisker stimulations. Whether cortical adaptation is specific to the stimulated whisker is not known. The aim of this intracellular study was to determine whether the response of a cortical cell to stimulation of an adjacent whisker would be affected by previous adaptation induced by stimulation of the principal whisker and vice versa. Using a high-frequency stimulation that causes substantial adaptation in the cortex and much less adaptation in the thalamus, we show that cortical adaptation evoked by a train of stimuli applied to one whisker does not affect the synaptic response to subsequent stimulation of a neighboring whisker. Our data indicate that intrinsic mechanisms are not involved in cortical adaptation. Thalamic recordings obtained under the same conditions demonstrated that an adjacent whisker response was not generated in the thalamus, indicating that the observed whisker-specific adaptation results from diverging thalamic inputs or from cortical integration.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17182787      PMCID: PMC6674994          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4056-06.2006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  40 in total

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6.  Cortical transformation of wide-field (multiwhisker) sensory responses.

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7.  Cross-trial correlation analysis of evoked potentials reveals arousal-related attenuation of thalamo-cortical coupling.

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8.  Neural Coding of Contact Events in Somatosensory Cortex.

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Review 9.  Sensory-evoked synaptic integration in cerebellar and cerebral cortical neurons.

Authors:  Paul Chadderton; Andreas T Schaefer; Stephen R Williams; Troy W Margrie
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2014-01-17       Impact factor: 34.870

10.  Tactile frequency discrimination is enhanced by circumventing neocortical adaptation.

Authors:  Simon Musall; Wolfger von der Behrens; Johannes M Mayrhofer; Bruno Weber; Fritjof Helmchen; Florent Haiss
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2014-09-21       Impact factor: 24.884

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