| Literature DB >> 24723851 |
Trevor C Griffen1, Arianna Maffei2.
Abstract
The mammalian neocortex is composed of a variety of cell types organized in a highly interconnected circuit. GABAergic neurons account for only about 20% of cortical neurons. However, they show widespread connectivity and a high degree of diversity in morphology, location, electrophysiological properties and gene expression. In addition, distinct populations of inhibitory neurons have different sensory response properties, capacities for plasticity and sensitivities to changes in sensory experience. In this review we summarize experimental evidence regarding the properties of GABAergic neurons in primary sensory cortex. We will discuss how distinct GABAergic neurons and different forms of GABAergic inhibitory plasticity may contribute to shaping sensory cortical circuit activity and function.Entities:
Keywords: GABA; inhibition; inhibitory neurons; sensory cortex; synaptic plasticity
Year: 2014 PMID: 24723851 PMCID: PMC3972456 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2014.00091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Approaches for recording the activity of inhibitory neurons and inhibitory postsynaptic responses .
| Extracellular recordings | Spike width (FS vs. RS) | Spikes | Prone to misidentification, some arrays limited to deep layers | Simons, |
| Optogenetics | Spikes | Some arrays limited to deep layers | Cardin, | |
| Juxtacellular recordings | Spike width (FS vs. RS) | Spikes | Low yield, cannot identify RS interneurons | Wu et al., |
| Two-photon guided targeting | Spikes | Superficial layers | Liu et al., | |
| Reconstruction | Spikes | Low yield | Wu et al., | |
| Whole cell patch of interneurons | Reconstruction, depolarization induced firing patterns | Membrane potential, spikes | Very low yield | Azouz et al., |
| Two-photon guided targeting | Membrane potential, spikes | Superficial layers, low yield | Gentet et al., | |
| Calcium dye imaging | Genetic labeling | Changes in calcium concentration | Superficial layers, cannot resolve individual spikes | Sohya et al., |
| Whole cell patch of pyramidal neurons | Reconstruction, depolarization induced firing patterns | Somatic inhibitory/excitatory conductances, response reversal potentials | May not resolve dendritic inhibition | Anderson et al., |
FS, fast spiking width. RS, regular spiking width.
Tools for manipulating inhibition .
| Pharmacology | GABAA receptor agonists | Muscimol | Broadly acting, silences neurons | Reiter and Stryker, | |
| GABAA receptor allosteric enhancers | Benzodiazepines and zolpidem | Enhances GABAergic transmission directly | Broadly acting | Fagiolini and Hensch, | |
| GABAA receptor antagonists | Picrotoxin and bicuculline | Blocks GABAergic transmission directly | Broadly acting | Sillito, | |
| GABA synthesis inhibitors | 3-MPA | Broadly acting | Harauzov et al., | ||
| Growth factors | IGF-1 | Probe signaling cascades | Broadly acting, actions beyond inhibition | Maya-Vetencourt et al., | |
| Genetics | Overexpression | BDNF | Ubiquitous or targeted overexpression | Depend on expression system | Hanover et al., |
| Knockout | GAD65 | Full, ubiquitous knockout | Present through development | Fagiolini and Hensch, | |
| Conditional knockout/knockdown | Targeted | Depends on knockout/knockdown system | |||
| Optogenetics | Photoactivation | ChR | Targets genetic cell classes, good temporal response | Non-physiological stimulation parameters, non-physiological neurotransmission | Atallah et al., |
| Photo-inhibition | HaR/ArchR | Targets genetic cell classes | Incomplete inhibition, slow kinetics | Atallah et al., | |
| Sensory experience | Sensory deprivation | Dark rearing, hearing loss, whisker removal | Delays circuit development | Non-specific effects | Benevento et al., |
| Environmental enrichment | Exercise, sensory enrichment | Re-opens critical periods | Non-specific effects | Sale et al., | |
| Sensory alterations | Monocular Lid suture, selective whisker removal, high frequency hearing loss | Critical period plasticity useful for modeling human disease | Induces complex changes at excitatory and inhibitory synapses | Hubel and Wiesel, |
3-MPA, 3-mercaptopropionic acid. ChR, channelrhodopsin. HaR, halorhodopsin. ArchR, archaerhodopsin.
Tuning width of inhibitory neurons by cell type.
| FS | V1 | 4 | Broadly tuned | Cat, Rabbit, Mouse | Swadlow and Weyand, |
| 4 | Mixed | Cat | Hirsch et al., | ||
| 2/3, 5/6 | Well-tuned | Cat | Cardin et al., | ||
| Mixed | Broadly tuned | Cat, Mouse | Niell and Stryker, | ||
| Mixed | Mixed | Cat | Azouz et al., | ||
| A1 | 4, Mixed | Broadly tuned | Cat, Rat, Mouse | Atencio and Schreiner, | |
| S1 | 4, Mixed | Broadly tuned | Rat, Rabbit | Simons, | |
| 4, Mixed | Well-tuned | Rat, Mouse | Zhu and Connors, | ||
| GC | Mixed | Well-tuned | Rat | Yokota et al., | |
| PV | V1 | 2/3, 4 | Broadly tuned | Mouse | Ma et al., |
| 2/3 | Mixed | Mouse | Runyan et al., | ||
| A1 | 2/3 | Broadly tuned | Mouse | Li et al., | |
| Mixed | Well-tuned | Mouse | Moore and Wehr, | ||
| Chandelier | S1 | 2/3 | Broadly tuned | Rat | Zhu et al., |
| SOM | V1 | 2/3, 4 | Well-tuned | Mouse | Ma et al., |
| A1 | 2/3 | Well-tuned | Mouse | Li et al., | |
| VIP | A1 | Tone responsive, tuning unknown | Mouse | Pi et al., | |
| Layer 1 | S1 | 1: deep projecting | Well-tuned | Rat | Zhu and Zhu, |
| S1 | 1: local | Broadly tuned | Rat | Zhu and Zhu, | |
| Pir | 1 | Broadly tuned | Rat | Poo and Isaacson, |
FS, fast spiking width; V1, primary visual cortex; A1, primary auditory cortex; S1, primary somatosensory cortex; GC, primary gustatory cortex; Pir, primary olfactory cortex; PV, parvalbumin positive neurons; SOM, somatostatin positive neurons; VIP, vasoactive intestinal peptide positive neurons.
Relative tuning of excitatory and inhibitory somatic conductances/currents in excitatory neurons.
| V1: Orientation | Mixed, 2/3, 4 | Thiopental, ketamine/thiopental, diprivan/sufentanil citrate, pentobarbital/chlorprothixene | Adult | Cat, Mouse | Co-tuned | Anderson et al., |
| 4 | Urethane/chlorprothixene | Pre-critical period | Mouse | Co-tuned | Li et al., | |
| Mixed | Alfaxolone/alfadolone, | Mixed | Cat | Mixed | Monier et al., | |
| 5 | Ketamine/thiopental, diprivan/sufentanil citrate | Adult | Cat | Different excitatory and inhibitory tuning | Martinez et al., | |
| 2/3, 4 | Urethane/chlorprothixene | Adult, critical period | Mouse | Inhibition broader than excitation | Liu et al., | |
| A1: Frequency | Mixed, 3–5 | Ketamine/medetomidine, pentobarbital | Pre-critical period, critical period, adult | Rat, Mouse | Co-tuned/Similar | Wehr and Zador, |
| Mixed | Ketamine/xylazine | Pre-critical period | Rat | Different excitatory and inhibitory tuning | Dorrn et al., | |
| Mixed | Ketamine/xylazine | Adult | Rat | Co-tuned | Dorrn et al., | |
| 4 | Ketamine/xylazine | Pre-critical period | Rat | Co-tuned | Sun et al., | |
| 4 | Ketamine/xylazine | Adult | Rat | Inhibition broader than excitation | Wu et al., | |
| A1: Intensity | Mixed | Ketamine/medetomidine | Pre-critical period/critical period | Rat | Co-tuned/Similar | Wehr and Zador, |
| Mixed, 4 | Ketamine/xylazine, pentobarbital | Adult | Rat | Umbalanced | Wu et al., | |
| Pir: Odor | 2/3 | Urethane, ketamine | Pre-critical period, critical period | Rat | Inhibition broader than excitation | Poo and Isaacson, |