| Literature DB >> 19225586 |
Hiroshi T Ito1, Erin M Schuman.
Abstract
The brain uses a strategy of labor division, which may allow it to accomplish more elaborate and complicated tasks, but in turn, imposes a requirement for central control to integrate information among different brain areas. Anatomically, the divergence of long-range neuromodulator projections appears well-suited to coordinate communication between brain areas. Oscillatory brain activity is a prominent feature of neural transmission. Thus, the ability of neuromodulators to modulate signal transmission in a frequency-dependent manner adds an additional level of regulation. Here, we review the significance of frequency-dependent signal modulation in brain function and how a neuronal network can possess such properties. We also describe how a neuromodulator, dopamine, changes frequency-dependent signal transmission, controlling information flow from the entorhinal cortex to the hippocampus.Entities:
Keywords: CA1; dopamine; frequency-dependent modulation; neuromodulator; oscillation
Year: 2008 PMID: 19225586 PMCID: PMC2622745 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.01.027.2008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Examples of differential signal transmission between low and high frequency inputs. In monosynaptic transmission, low frequency inputs elicit constant postsynaptic responses, however, high frequency inputs induce facilitation or depression in signal transmission. A simple network composed of monosynaptic excitation and disynaptic inhibition exhibits more diverse patterns of signal modulations. The influence of disynaptic transmission on monosynaptic transmission is not evident during low frequency inputs, due to the temporal delay imposed by the additional synapse. During high frequency stimulation, however, disynaptic inhibition effectively influences monosynaptic excitation. Because each neuron shows distinct response to high frequency stimuli, disynaptic inhibitory connection shows facilitation, depression, or some characteristic response, which will, together with modulation in monosynaptic excitation, expand differential patterns of signal transmission between low and high frequency stimulation.
Figure 2Frequency dependent modulation of dopamine at temporoammonic-CA1 synapses. (A) Area CA1 in the hippocampus receives two distinct excitatory inputs, one is from area CA3 (the Schaffer-collateral pathway) and another is from the entorhinal cortex (the temporoammonic pathway). Dopamine selectively depresses baseline field EPSP at temporoammonic-CA1 synapses, and has no significant effect on Schaffer-collateral-CA1 synapses. Under the delivery of different frequency stimuli, dopamine exerts a frequency-dependent modulation at temporoammonic-CA1 synapses, depressing low-frequency signals but enhancing high-frequency signals. (B) Primary effect of dopamine is a depression of excitatory synapses onto both pyramidal neurons and interneurons. The influence of disynaptic inhibition on monosynaptic excitation is not evident during low frequency inputs, thus dopamine simply depresses total excitation to pyramidal neurons. In contrast, during high frequency stimulation, disynaptic inhibition becomes influential and intrinsically strong inhibitory connections at temporoammonic-CA1 synapses suppress monosynaptic excitation effectively. Dopamine-induced excitatory depression weakens both monosynaptic excitation and disynaptic inhibition, however, the influence on disynaptic connection is larger than monosynaptic connection, due to nonlinear property in action potential generation. Thus, total excitation during high frequency inputs become larger under dopamine application.