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Author Notes:

Garrett B Stanley , Email: garrett.stanley@bme.gatech.edu

N.C.W., C.R.F., and G.B.S. designed research; N.C.W., P.Y.B., Y.J.L., M.F.B., W.M.S., C.R.F., and G.B.S. performed research; N.C.W. and G.B.S. analyzed data; N.C.W., C.R.F., and G.B.S. wrote the paper.

We thank Aurelie Pala, Audrey Sederberg, Adam Willats, Christian Waiblinger, and Elaida Dimwamwa for helpful comments on the data analysis and manuscript. We also thank Aurelie Pala for assistance with spike-sorting and Mahmood S. Hoseini for his assistance with the network model.

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke BRAIN Grant R01NS104928 (to G.B.S), the NIH National Institute of Mental Health BRAIN Grant U01MH106027 (to G.B.S. and C.R.F.), the NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Pre-doctoral National Research Service Award NS098691 (to P.Y.B.), the NIH National Eye Institute Grant R01EY023173 (to C.R.F.), and National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships (W.M.S. and M.F.B.).

Keywords:

  • Science & Technology
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • Neurosciences
  • Neurosciences & Neurology
  • adaptation
  • cortex
  • inhibition
  • somatosensory
  • synchrony
  • thalamus
  • THALAMOCORTICAL RESPONSE TRANSFORMATIONS
  • PERIODIC WHISKER DEFLECTIONS
  • SENSORY ADAPTATION
  • FUNCTIONAL-ORGANIZATION
  • PERCEPTUAL ADAPTATION
  • SOMATOSENSORY CORTEX
  • INHIBITORY NEURONS
  • TACTILE FEATURES
  • BARREL CORTEX
  • LAYER 2/3

Rapid Cortical Adaptation and the Role of Thalamic Synchrony during Wakefulness

Tools:

Journal Title:

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE

Volume:

Volume 41, Number 25

Publisher:

, Pages 5421-5439

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Rapid sensory adaptation is observed across all sensory systems, and strongly shapes sensory percepts in complex sensory environments. Yet despite its ubiquity and likely necessity for survival, the mechanistic basis is poorly understood. A wide range of primarily in vitro and anesthetized studies have demonstrated the emergence of adaptation at the level of primary sensory cortex, with only modest signatures in earlier stages of processing. The nature of rapid adaptation and how it shapes sensory representations during wakefulness, and thus the potential role in perceptual adaptation, is underexplored, as are the mechanisms that underlie this phenomenon. To address these knowledge gaps, we recorded spiking activity in primary somatosensory cortex (S1) and the upstream ventral posteromedial (VPm) thalamic nucleus in the vibrissa pathway of awake male and female mice, and quantified responses to whisker stimuli delivered in isolation and embedded in an adapting sensory background. We found that cortical sensory responses were indeed adapted by persistent sensory stimulation; putative excitatory neurons were profoundly adapted, and inhibitory neurons only modestly so. Further optogenetic manipulation experiments and network modeling suggest this largely reflects adaptive changes in synchronous thalamic firing combined with robust engagement of feedforward inhibition, with little contribution from synaptic depression. Taken together, these results suggest that cortical adaptation in the regime explored here results from changes in the timing of thalamic input, and the way in which this differentially impacts cortical excitation and feedforward inhibition, pointing to a prominent role of thalamic gating in rapid adaptation of primary sensory cortex.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Rapid adaptation of sensory activity strongly shapes representations of sensory inputs across all sensory pathways over the timescale of seconds, and has profound effects on sensory perception. Despite its ubiquity and theoretical role in the efficient encoding of complex sensory environments, the mechanistic basis is poorly understood, particularly during wakefulness. In this study in the vibrissa pathway of awake mice, we show that cortical representations of sensory inputs are strongly shaped by rapid adaptation, and that this is mediated primarily by adaptive gating of the thalamic inputs to primary sensory cortex and the differential way in which these inputs engage cortical subpopulations of neurons.

Copyright information:

© 2021 the authors

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/rdf).
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