| Literature DB >> 34613380 |
Maria Medalla1,2, Wayne Chang1,2, Sara Ibañez1,2, Teresa Guillamon-Vivancos1,3, Mathias Nittmann1,4, Anastasia Kapitonava1, Silas E Busch1,5, Tara L Moore1,2, Douglas L Rosene1,2, Jennifer I Luebke1,2.
Abstract
The laminar cellular and circuit mechanisms by which the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) exerts flexible control of motor and affective information for goal-directed behavior have not been elucidated. Using multimodal tract-tracing, in vitro patch-clamp recording and computational approaches in rhesus monkeys (M. mulatta), we provide evidence that specialized motor and affective network dynamics can be conferred by layer-specific biophysical and structural properties of ACC pyramidal neurons targeting two key downstream structures -the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) and the amygdala (AMY). AMY-targeting neurons exhibited significant laminar differences, with L5 more excitable (higher input resistance and action potential firing rates) than L3 neurons. Between-pathway differences were found within L5, with AMY-targeting neurons exhibiting greater excitability, apical dendritic complexity, spine densities, and diversity of inhibitory inputs than PMd-targeting neurons. Simulations using a pyramidal-interneuron network model predict that these layer- and pathway-specific single-cell differences contribute to distinct network oscillatory dynamics. L5 AMY-targeting networks are more tuned to slow oscillations well-suited for affective and contextual processing timescales, while PMd-targeting networks showed strong beta/gamma synchrony implicated in rapid sensorimotor processing. These findings are fundamental to our broad understanding of how layer-specific cellular and circuit properties can drive diverse laminar activity found in flexible behavior. Published by Oxford University Press 2021.Entities:
Keywords: biophysical networks; electrophysiology; inhibitory neurons; medial prefrontal cortex; non-human primate
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34613380 PMCID: PMC9113240 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 4.861