| Literature DB >> 18958231 |
Farran Briggs1, W Martin Usrey.
Abstract
Thalamocortical communication is a dynamic process influenced by both presynaptic and postsynaptic mechanisms. In this study, we recorded single-unit responses from cortical neurons that received direct input from the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) to address the question of whether prior patterns of cortical activity affect the ability of LGN inputs to drive cortical responses. By examining the ongoing activity that preceded the arrival of electrically evoked spikes from the LGN, we identified a number of activity patterns that were predictive of suprathreshold communication. Namely, cortical neurons were more likely to respond to LGN stimulation when their activity levels increased to 30-40Hz and/or their activity displayed rhythmic patterns (30 ms intervals) with increased power in the gamma frequency band. Cortical neurons were also more likely to respond to LGN stimulation when their activity increased 30-40 ms prior to stimulation, suggesting that the phase of gamma activity also contributes to geniculocortical communication. Based on these results, we conclude that ongoing activity in the cortex is not random, but rather organized in a manner that can influence the dynamics of thalamocortical communication.Entities:
Keywords: LGN; V1; coding; lateral geniculate nucleus; spike rate
Year: 2007 PMID: 18958231 PMCID: PMC2526010 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.07.003.2007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Figure 1Identifying cortical neurons that receive LGN input and measuring conduction latency. () Responses of a representative cortical neuron to electrical stimulation in the LGN. Solid blue and red lines represent average responses to non-collision and collision trials, respectively (average of 12 trials each; aligned to the stimulus artifact at time zero). Dashed lines represent standard errors. The response latency for this neuron was 1.6 ms. () Distribution of conduction latencies across the sample of identified cortical neurons with direct LGN input (n = 20).
Figure 2Cortical activity before and after electrical stimulation in the LGN. The two traces show the average occurrence of cortical spikes (normalized to spontaneous levels) before and after electrically stimulating the LGN. Red traces correspond to activity profiles before and after shocks that successfully evoked a monosynaptic response; blue traces correspond to activity profiles for shocks that failed to evoke a monosynaptic response. Dashed lines indicate two standard deviations above and below the mean spontaneous levels for the two trial types. Asterisk indicates the bin where cortical activity differed significantly between successful and unsuccessful trials (p < 0.02, t-tests). Shock timing is aligned to time = 0. Bin width is equal to 10 ms.
Figure 3Comparison of spike rates and spike correlations that precede successful and unsuccessful stimulation trials. () Relative occurrence of different spike rates that preceded electrical stimulation in the LGN. Red and blue traces (left axis) show the average proportion of spike rates that preceded shocks successful at evoking cortical responses and unsuccessful at evoking responses, respectively. Error bars indicate the SEM; asterisk indicates a significant difference in the proportion of successful versus unsuccessful trials (p < 0.03, t-test). The black trace (right axis) shows the distribution of all preceding spike rates for all trials (successful and unsuccessful). Error bars indicate the SEM. () Cumulative autocorrelograms made from cortical spike trains in trials where electrical stimulation was successful in evoking a cortical response (shown in red) and unsuccessful in evoking a response (shown in blue). () A difference autocorrelogram made from the two cumulative autocorrelograms shown in .