4.4 Article

Thalamic state influences timing precision in the thalamocortical circuit

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 125, 期 5, 页码 1833-1850

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00261.2020

关键词

burst; coding; optogenetic; thalamocortical; vibrissa

资金

  1. NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [R01NS085447, R01NS104928]
  2. NIH National Research Service Award (NRSA) Predoctoral Fellowship [F31NS089412]
  3. Global Biomedical Engineering Research and Education Fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigated the role of thalamic state on timing within the thalamocortical circuit, finding that thalamic state influences how neurons in the thalamus and cortex respond to sensory stimuli, impacting timing precision. These state-dependent changes propagate to the cortex, altering the encoding of sensory signals in the cortex.
Sensory signals from the outside world are transduced at the periphery, passing through thalamus before reaching cortex, ultimately giving rise to the sensory representations that enable us to perceive the world. The thalamocortical circuit is particularly sensitive to the temporal precision of thalamic spiking due to highly convergent synaptic connectivity. Thalamic neurons can exhibit burst and tonic modes of firing that strongly influence timing within the thalamus. The impact of these changes in thalamic state on sensory encoding in the cortex, however, remains unclear. Here, we investigated the role of thalamic state on timing in the thalamocortical circuit of the vibrissa pathway in the anesthetized rat. We optogenetically hyperpolarized thalamus while recording single unit activity in both thalamus and cortex. Tonic spiketriggered analysis revealed temporally precise thalamic spiking that was locked to weak white-noise sensory stimuli, whereas thalamic burst spiking was associated with a loss in stimulus-locked temporal precision. These thalamic state-dependent changes propagated to cortex such that the cortical timing precision was diminished during the hyperpolarized (burst biased) thalamic state. Although still sensory driven, the cortical neurons became significantly less precisely locked to the weak white-noise stimulus. The results here suggests a state-dependent differential regulation of spike timing precision in the thalamus that could gate what signals are ultimately propagated to cortex. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The majority of sensory signals are transmitted through the thalamus. There is growing evidence of complex thalamic gating through coordinated firing modes that have a strong impact on cortical sensory representations. Optogenetic hyperpolarization of thalamus pushed it into burst firing that disrupted precise time-locked sensory signaling, with a direct impact on the downstream cortical encoding, setting the stage for a timing-based thalamic gate of sensory signaling.

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