4.7 Article

Oscillatory waveform sharpness asymmetry changes in motor thalamus and motor cortex in a rat model of Parkinson's disease

期刊

EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY
卷 354, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2022.114089

关键词

Low threshold calcium spike (LTS) bursts; Basal ganglia; Slow wave oscillations; Dopamine Motor thalamus; Motor cortex; Parkinson's disease

资金

  1. Intramural Research Program of the NINDS, NIH
  2. Health Research Council of New Zealand [17-284]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Parkinson's disease and dopamine loss have significant effects on the activity of motor thalamus and motor cortex. Dopamine lesion decreases the firing rate of layer V pyramidal neurons in the motor cortex, while not affecting the activity of ventroanterior-ventrolateral thalamus. Parkinson's disease is also associated with an increase in oscillatory waveform sharpness asymmetry in both motor thalamus and motor cortex.
Parkinson's disease (PD) causes bursty and oscillatory activity in basal ganglia output that is thought to contribute to movement deficits through impact on motor thalamus and motor cortex (MCx). We examined the effect of dopamine loss on motor thalamus and motor cortex activity by recording neuronal and LFP activities in ventroanterior-ventrolateral (VAVL) thalamus and MCx in urethane-anesthetised control and parkinsonian rats. Dopamine lesion decreased the firing rate and increased the bursting of putative pyramidal neurons in layer V, but not layer VI, of the MCx without changing other aspects of firing pattern. In contrast, dopamine lesion did not affect VAVL firing rate, pattern or low threshold calcium spike bursts. Slow-wave (similar to 1 Hz) oscillations in LFP recordings were analyzed with conventional power and waveform shape analyses. While dopamine lesion did not influence total power, it was consistently associated with an increase in oscillatory waveform sharpness asymmetry (i.e., sharper troughs vs. peaks) in both motor thalamus and MCx. Furthermore, we found that measures of sharpness asymmetry were positively correlated in paired motor thalamus-MCx recordings, and that correlation coefficients were larger in dopamine lesioned rats. These data support the idea that dysfunctional MCx activity in parkinsonism emerges from subsets of cell groups (e.g. layer V pyramidal neurons) and is evident in the shape but not absolute power of slow-wave oscillations. Hypoactive layer V pyramidal neuron firing in dopamine lesioned rats is unlikely to be driven by VAVL thalamus and may, therefore, reflect the loss of mesocortical dopaminergic afferents and/or changes in intrinsic excitability.

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