4.7 Article

Input Zone-Selective Dysrhythmia in Motor Thalamus after Dopamine Depletion

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 50, Pages 10382-10404

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1753.21.2021

Keywords

basal ganglia; electrophysiology; oscillation; Parkinson's disease; thalamus

Categories

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [MC_UU_12020/5, MC_UU_12024/2, MC_UU_00003/5, MC_UU_12024/1, MC_UU_00003/6]
  2. Parkinson's UK [G-0806]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [15H01663, 26430015]
  4. Human Frontier Science Program [LT000396/2009-L]
  5. Marie Curie European Re-integration Grant SNAP-PD - European Union
  6. Medical Research Council [MC_UU_12024/2, MC_UU_12024/1, MC_UU_12020/5, MC_UU_00003/5, MC_UU_00003/6] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. Parkinson's UK [G-0806] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26430015, 15H01663] Funding Source: KAKEN

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In Parkinsonism, dopamine depletion leads to dysrhythmic activity in basal ganglia-recipient zone neurons, which differs from the normal neural cell activity and may affect brain information processing.
The cerebral cortex, basal ganglia and motor thalamus form circuits important for purposeful movement. In Parkinsonism, basal ganglia neurons often exhibit dysrhythmic activity during, and with respect to, the slow (similar to 1 Hz) and beta-hand (15-30Hz) oscillations that emerge in cortex in a brain state-dependent manner. There remains, however, a pressing need to elucidate the extent to which motor thalamus activity becomes similarly dysrhythmic after dopamine depletion relevant to Parkinsonism. To address this, we recorded single-neuron and ensemble outputs in the basal ganglia-recipient zone (BZ) and cerebellar-recipient zone (CZ) of motor thalamus in anesthetized male dopamine-intact rats and 6-OHDA-lesioned rats during two brain states, respectively defined by cortical slow-wave activity and activation. Two forms of thalamic input zone-selective dysrhythmia manifested after dopamine depletion: (1) BZ neurons, but not CZ neurons, exhibited abnormal phase-shifted firing with respect to cortical slow oscillations prevalent during slow-wave activity; and (2) BZ neurons, but not CZ neurons, inappropriately synchronized their firing and engaged with the exaggerated cortical beta oscillations arising in activated states. These dysrhythmias were not accompanied by the thalamic hypoactivity predicted by canonical firing rate-based models of circuit organization in Parkinsonism. Complementary recordings of neurons in substantia nigra pars reticulata suggested that their altered activity dynamics could underpin the BZ dysrhythmias. Finally, pharmacological perturbations demonstrated that ongoing activity in the motor thalamus bolsters exaggerated beta oscillations in motor cortex. We conclude that BZ neurons are selectively primed to mediate the detrimental influences of abnormal slow and beta-hand rhythms on circuit information processing in Parkinsonism.

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