4.8 Article

An increase of inhibition drives the developmental decorrelation of neural activity

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.78811

Keywords

development; E-I ratio; decorrelation; electrophysiology; neural network models; Human; Mouse

Categories

Funding

  1. European Research Council [ERC-2015-CoG 681577]
  2. Horizon 2020 Framework Programme [DEEPER 101016787]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [437610067, 178316478, 302153259]
  4. Landesforschungsfoerderung Hamburg [LFF76, LFF73]
  5. American Friends of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

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This study reveals that changes in the ratio of excitation to inhibition control the decorrelation of neural activity during brain development, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders.
Throughout development, the brain transits from early highly synchronous activity patterns to a mature state with sparse and decorrelated neural activity, yet the mechanisms underlying this process are poorly understood. The developmental transition has important functional consequences, as the latter state is thought to allow for more efficient storage, retrieval, and processing of information. Here, we show that, in the mouse medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), neural activity during the first two postnatal weeks decorrelates following specific spatial patterns. This process is accompanied by a concomitant tilting of excitation-inhibition (E-I) ratio toward inhibition. Using optogenetic manipulations and neural network modeling, we show that the two phenomena are mechanistically linked, and that a relative increase of inhibition drives the decorrelation of neural activity. Accordingly, in mice mimicking the etiology of neurodevelopmental disorders, subtle alterations in E-I ratio are associated with specific impairments in the correlational structure of spike trains. Finally, capitalizing on EEG data from newborn babies, we show that an analogous developmental transition takes place also in the human brain. Thus, changes in E-I ratio control the (de)correlation of neural activity and, by these means, its developmental imbalance might contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders.

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