4.8 Article

Distributed cell assemblies spanning prefrontal cortex and striatum

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 1-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.10.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-2010-BLAN-0217-01]
  2. French Ministry of Research, MEMOLIFE Laboratory of Excellence
  3. Fondation Bettencourt Schueller

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Researchers have discovered highly synchronous cell assemblies in the prefrontal cortex and striatum, indicating their role in coordinating brain function across different structures. These assemblies were found to be correlated with behavioral parameters and were more robust in expressing these correlations than individual neurons. Additionally, the study found that these assemblies can be spontaneously reactivated during sleep and immobility.
Highly synchronous neuronal assembly activity is deemed essential for cognitive brain function. In theory, such synchrony could coordinate multiple brain areas performing complementary processes. However, cell assemblies have been observed only in single structures, typically cortical areas, and little is known about their synchrony with downstream subcortical structures, such as the striatum. Here, we demonstrate distributed cell assemblies activated at high synchrony (similar to 10 ms) spanning prefrontal cortex and striatum. In addition to including neurons at different brain hierarchical levels, surprisingly, they synchronized functionally distinct limbic and associative sub-regions. These assembly activations occurred when members shifted their firing phase relative to ongoing 4 Hz and theta rhythms, in association with high gamma oscillations. This suggests that these rhythms could mediate the emergence of cross-structural assemblies. To test for the role of assemblies in behavior, we trained the rats to perform a task requiring cognitive flexibility, alternating between two different rules in a T-maze. Overall, assembly activations were correlated with task-relevant parameters, including impending choice, reward, rule, or rule order. Moreover, these behavioral correlates were more robustly expressed by assemblies than by their individual member neurons. Finally, to verify whether assemblies can be endogenously generated, we found that they were indeed spontaneously reactivated during sleep and quiet immobility. Thus, cell assemblies are a more general coding mechanism than previously envisioned, linking distributed neocortical and subcortical areas at high synchrony.

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