Literature DB >> 19350384

Inhibitory contribution to suprathreshold corticostriatal responses: an experimental and modeling study.

Edén Flores-Barrera1, Antonio Laville, Victor Plata, Dagoberto Tapia, José Bargas, Elvira Galarraga.   

Abstract

Neostriatal neurons may undergo events of spontaneous synchronization as those observed in recurrent networks of excitatory neurons, even when cortical afferents are transected. It is necessary to explain these events because the neostriatum is a recurrent network of inhibitory neurons. Synchronization of neuronal activity may be caused by plateau-like depolarizations. Plateau-like orthodromic depolarizations that resemble up-states in medium spiny neostriatal neurons (MSNs) may be induced by a single corticostriatal suprathreshold stimulus. Slow synaptic depolarizations may last hundreds of milliseconds, decay slower than the monosynaptic glutamatergic synaptic potentials that induce them, and sustain repetitive firing. Because inhibitory inputs impinging onto MSNs have a reversal potential above the resting membrane potential but below the threshold for firing, they conform a type of "shunting inhibition". This work asks if shunting GABAergic inputs onto MSNs arrive asynchronously enough as to help in sustaining the plateau-like corticostriatal response after a single cortical stimulus. This may help to begin explaining autonomous processing in the striatal micro-circuitry in the presence of a tonic excitatory drive and independently of spatio-temporally organized inputs. It is shown here that besides synaptic currents from AMPA/KA- and NMDA-receptors, as well as L-type intrinsic Ca(2+)- currents, inhibitory synapses help in maintaining the slow depolarization, although they accomplish the role of depressing firing at the beginning of the response. We then used a NEURON model of spiny cells to show that inhibitory synapses arriving asynchronously on the dendrites can help to simulate a plateau potential similar to that observed experimentally.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19350384     DOI: 10.1007/s10571-009-9394-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Mol Neurobiol        ISSN: 0272-4340            Impact factor:   5.046


  68 in total

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  6 in total

1.  Different corticostriatal integration in spiny projection neurons from direct and indirect pathways.

Authors:  Edén Flores-Barrera; Bianca J Vizcarra-Chacón; Dagoberto Tapia; José Bargas; Elvira Galarraga
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2.  Dopaminergic modulation of corticostriatal responses in medium spiny projection neurons from direct and indirect pathways.

Authors:  Edén Flores-Barrera; Bianca J Vizcarra-Chacón; José Bargas; Dagoberto Tapia; Elvira Galarraga
Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2011-03-29

3.  Lateral and feedforward inhibition suppress asynchronous activity in a large, biophysically-detailed computational model of the striatal network.

Authors:  Jason T Moyer; Benjamin L Halterman; Leif H Finkel; John A Wolf
Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci       Date:  2014-11-25       Impact factor: 2.380

4.  Contribution of different classes of glutamate receptors in the corticostriatal polysynaptic responses from striatal direct and indirect projection neurons.

Authors:  Bianca J Vizcarra-Chacón; Mario A Arias-García; Maria B Pérez-Ramírez; Edén Flores-Barrera; Dagoberto Tapia; Rene Drucker-Colin; José Bargas; Elvira Galarraga
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2013-06-20       Impact factor: 3.288

5.  Dynamic modulation of spike timing-dependent calcium influx during corticostriatal upstates.

Authors:  R C Evans; Y M Maniar; K T Blackwell
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-07-10       Impact factor: 2.974

6.  Duration differences of corticostriatal responses in striatal projection neurons depend on calcium activated potassium currents.

Authors:  Mario A Arias-García; Dagoberto Tapia; Edén Flores-Barrera; Jesús E Pérez-Ortega; José Bargas; Elvira Galarraga
Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2013-10-04
  6 in total

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