4.7 Article

Mouse Visual Neocortex Supports Multiple Stereotyped Patterns of Microcircuit Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 23, Pages 7769-7777

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0169-14.2014

Keywords

two-photon; circuitry; connectivity; cortex; graphs; visual

Categories

Funding

  1. DANA Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation [0952686]
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM007839]
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences
  5. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [0952686] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Spiking correlations between neocortical neurons provide insight into the underlying synaptic connectivity that defines cortical microcircuitry. Here, using two-photon calcium fluorescence imaging, we observed the simultaneous dynamics of hundreds of neurons in slices of mouse primary visual cortex (V1). Consistent with a balance of excitation and inhibition, V1 dynamics were characterized by a linear scaling between firing rate and circuit size. Using lagged firing correlations between neurons, we generated functional wiring diagrams to evaluate the topological features of V1 microcircuitry. We found that circuit connectivity exhibited both cyclic graph motifs, indicating recurrent wiring, and acyclic graph motifs, indicating feedforward wiring. After overlaying the functional wiring diagrams onto the imaged field of view, we found properties consistent with Rentian scaling: wiring diagrams were topologically efficient because they minimized wiring with a modular architecture. Within single imaged fields of view, V1 contained multiple discrete circuits that were overlapping and highly interdigitated but were still distinct from one another. The majority of neurons that were shared between circuits displayed peri-event spiking activity whose timing was specific to the active circuit, whereas spike times for a smaller percentage of neurons were invariant to circuit identity. These data provide evidence that V1 microcircuitry exhibits balanced dynamics, is efficiently arranged in anatomical space, and is capable of supporting a diversity of multineuron spike firing patterns from overlapping sets of neurons.

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