4.8 Article

Multiscale model of primary motor cortex circuits predicts in vivo cell-type-specific, behavioral state-dependent dynamics

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 42, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112574

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Understanding cortical function requires studying multiple scales, and a multiscale mouse primary motor cortex model with over 10,000 neurons and 30 million synapses has been developed. The model accurately predicts in vivo layer- and cell-type-specific responses associated with behavioral states and experimental manipulations. This theoretical framework sheds light on the cell-type-specific multiscale dynamics associated with several experimental conditions and behaviors.
Understanding cortical function requires studying multiple scales: molecular, cellular, circuit, and behavioral. We develop a multiscale, biophysically detailed model of mouse primary motor cortex (M1) with over 10,000 neurons and 30 million synapses. Neuron types, densities, spatial distributions, morphologies, biophysics, connectivity, and dendritic synapse locations are constrained by experimental data. The model includes long-range inputs from seven thalamic and cortical regions and noradrenergic inputs. Connectivity depends on cell class and cortical depth at sublaminar resolution. The model accurately predicts in vivo layer- and cell-type-specific responses (firing rates and LFP) associated with behavioral states (quiet wakefulness and movement) and experimental manipulations (noradrenaline receptor blockade and thalamus inactivation). We generate mechanistic hypotheses underlying the observed activity and analyzed low-dimensional population latent dynamics. This quantitative theoretical framework can be used to integrate and interpret M1 experimental data and sheds light on the cell-type-specific multiscale dynamics associated with several experimental conditions and behaviors.

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