Faculty Opinions recommendation of Phase precession in hippocampal interneurons showing strong functional coupling to individual pyramidal cells.

Author(s):  
Edvard I Moser
2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (52) ◽  
pp. 13485-13492 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. Maurer ◽  
S. L. Cowen ◽  
S. N. Burke ◽  
C. A. Barnes ◽  
B. L. McNaughton

2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. 2432-2445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Booth ◽  
Amitabha Bose

The effect of synaptic inhibition on burst firing of a two-compartment model of a CA3 pyramidal cell is considered. We show that, depending on its timing, a short dose of fast decaying synaptic inhibition can either delay or advance the timing of firing of subsequent bursts. Moreover, increasing the strength of the inhibitory input is shown to modulate the burst profile from a full complex burst, to a burst with multiple spikes, to single spikes. We additionally show how slowly decaying inhibitory input can be used to synchronize a network of pyramidal cells. Implications for the phase precession phenomenon of hippocampal place cells and for the generation of temporal and rate codes are discussed.


Hippocampus ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 204-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amitabha Bose ◽  
Michael Recce

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürgen Graf ◽  
Vahid Rahmati ◽  
Myrtill Majoros ◽  
Otto W. Witte ◽  
Christian Geis ◽  
...  

Spontaneous correlated activity is a universal hallmark of immature neural circuits. However, the cellular dynamics and intrinsic mechanisms underlying neuronal synchrony in the intact developing brain are largely unknown. Here, we use two-photon Ca2+ imaging to comprehensively map the developmental trajectories of spontaneous network activity in hippocampal area CA1 in vivo. We unexpectedly find that synchronized activity peaks after the developmental emergence of effective synaptic inhibition in the second postnatal week. We demonstrate that the enhanced network synchrony reflects an increased functional coupling of individual neurons to local population activity. However, pairwise neuronal correlations are low, and network bursts recruit CA1 pyramidal cells in a virtually random manner. Using a dynamic systems modeling approach, we reconcile these experimental findings and identify network bi-stability as a potential regime underlying network burstiness at this age. Our analyses reveal an important role of synaptic input characteristics and network instability dynamics for the emergence of neuronal synchrony. Collectively, our data suggest a mechanism, whereby developing CA1 performs extensive input-discrimination learning prior to the onset of environmental exploration.


Nature ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 417 (6890) ◽  
pp. 738-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth D. Harris ◽  
Darrell A. Henze ◽  
Hajime Hirase ◽  
Xavier Leinekugel ◽  
George Dragoi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine W. Eyring ◽  
Jingjing Liu ◽  
Gabriele M. König ◽  
Shizu Hidema ◽  
Katsuhiko Nishimori ◽  
...  

AbstractThe oxytocin receptor (OXTR) is concentrated in specific brain regions, exemplified by hippocampal subregion CA2, that support social information processing. Oxytocinergic modulation of CA2 directly affects social behavior, yet how oxytocin regulates activity in CA2 remains incompletely understood. We found that OXTR stimulation acts via closure of M-current potassium channels in all OXT-sensitive CA2 neurons. M-current inhibition was persistent in CA2 pyramidal cells, whose prolonged burst firing required functional coupling of the OXTR to both Gαq and Gαi proteins. Other neuromodulators acted via distinct patterns of G-protein signaling to induce CA2 pyramidal neuron burst firing, underscoring its likely importance. CA2 burst firing impacted hippocampal subregion CA1 where stratum oriens-resident CA1 interneurons were targeted more strongly than CA1 pyramidal cells. Oxytocinergic modulation of interneurons, via CA2 pyramidal cell input and directly, triggered a long-lasting enhancement of CA3-CA1 transmission. Thus, transient activation of oxytocinergic inputs may initiate long-lasting recording of social information.


1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 393-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gene V. Wallenstein ◽  
Michael E. Hasselmo

Wallenstein, Gene V. and Michael E. Hasselmo. GABAergic modulation of hippocampal population activity: sequence learning, place field development, and the phase precession effect. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 393–408, 1997. A detailed biophysical model of hippocampal region CA3 was constructed to study how GABAergic modulation influences place field development and the learning and recall of sequence information. Simulations included 1,000 multicompartmental pyramidal cells, each consisting of seven intrinsic and four synaptic currents, and 200 multicompartmental interneurons, consisting of two intrinsic and four synaptic currents. Excitatory rhythmic septal input to the apical dendrites of pyramidal cells and both excitatory and inhibitory input to interneurons at theta frequencies provided a cellular basis for the development of theta and gamma frequency oscillations in population activity. The fundamental frequency of theta oscillations was dictated by the driving rhythm from the septum. Gamma oscillation frequency, however, was determined by both the decay time of the γ-aminobutyric acid-A (GABAA)-receptor-mediated synaptic current and the overall level of excitability in interneurons due to α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole proprionic acid and N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA)-receptor-gated channel activation. During theta population activity, total GABAB-receptor-mediated conductance levels were found to gradually rise and fall in rhythmic fashion with the predominant population frequency (theta rhythm). This resulted in periodic GABAB-receptor-mediated suppression of excitatory synaptic transmission at recurrent collaterals (intrinsic fibers) of pyramidal cells and suppression of inhibitory synaptic transmission to both pyramidal cells and interneurons. To test the ability of the model to learn and recall temporal sequence information, a completion task was employed. During learning, the network was presented a sequence of nonorthogonal spatial patterns. Each input pattern represented a spatial “location” of a simulated rat running a specific navigational path. Hebbian-type learning was expressed as an increase in postsynaptic NMDA-receptor-mediated conductances. Because of several factors including the sparse, asymmetric excitatory synaptic connections among pyramidal cells in the model and a sufficient degree of random “background” firing unrelated to the input patterns, repeated simulated runs resulted in the gradual emergence of place fields where a given cell began to respond to a contiguous segment of locations on the path. During recall, the simulated rat was placed at a random location on the previously learned path and tested to see whether the sequence of locations could be completed on the basis of this initial position. Periodic GABAB-receptor-mediated suppression of excitatory and inhibitory transmission at intrinsic but not afferent fibers resulted in sensory information about location being dominant during early portions of each theta cycle when GABAB-receptor-related effects were highest. This suppression declined with levels of GABAB receptor activation toward the end of a theta cycle, resulting in an increase in synaptic transmission at intrinsic fibers and the subsequent recall of a segment of the entire location sequence. This scenario typically continued across theta cycles until the full sequence was recalled. When the GABAB-receptor-mediated suppression of excitatory and inhibitory transmission at intrinsic fibers was not included in the model, place field development was curtailed and the network consequently exhibited poor learning and recall performance. This was, in part, due to increased competition of information from intrinsic and afferent fibers during early portions of each theta cycle. Because afferent sensory information did not dominate early in each cycle, the current location of the rat was obscured by ongoing activity from intrinsic sources. Furthermore, even when the current location was accurately identified, competition between afferent and intrinsic sources resulted in a tendency for rapid recall of several locations at once, which often lead to inaccuracies in the sequence. Thus the rat often recalled a path different from the particular one that was learned. GABAB-receptor-mediated modulation of excitatory synaptic transmission within a theta cycle resulted in a systematic relationship between single-unit activity and peaks in pyramidal cell population behavior (theta rhythm). Because presynaptic inhibition of intrinsic fibers was strongest at early portions of each theta cycle, single-unit firing usually started late in a cycle as the place field of the associated cell was approached. This firing typically advanced to progressively earlier phases in a theta cycle as the place field was traversed. Thus, as the rat moved through successive locations along a learned trajectory during completion trials, place cell firing gradually shifted from late phases of a theta cycle, where future locations were “predicted” (intrinsic information dominated), to early phases of a cycle, where the current location was “perceived” (afferent sources dominated). This result suggests that theGABAergic modulation of temporal sequence learning may serve as a general framework for understanding navigational phenomena such as the phase precession effect.


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