Defining cortical frequency tuning with recurrent excitatory circuitry

B Liu, GK Wu, R Arbuckle, HW Tao, LI Zhang - Nature neuroscience, 2007 - nature.com
B Liu, GK Wu, R Arbuckle, HW Tao, LI Zhang
Nature neuroscience, 2007nature.com
Neurons in the recipient layers of sensory cortices receive excitatory input from two major
sources: the feedforward thalamocortical and recurrent intracortical inputs. To address their
respective functional roles, we developed a new method for silencing cortex by competitively
activating GABAA while blocking GABAB receptors. In the rat primary auditory cortex, in vivo
whole-cell recording from the same neuron before and after local cortical silencing revealed
that thalamic input occupied the same area of frequency-intensity tonal receptive field as the …
Abstract
Neurons in the recipient layers of sensory cortices receive excitatory input from two major sources: the feedforward thalamocortical and recurrent intracortical inputs. To address their respective functional roles, we developed a new method for silencing cortex by competitively activating GABAA while blocking GABAB receptors. In the rat primary auditory cortex, in vivo whole-cell recording from the same neuron before and after local cortical silencing revealed that thalamic input occupied the same area of frequency-intensity tonal receptive field as the total excitatory input, but showed a flattened tuning curve. In contrast, excitatory intracortical input was sharply tuned with a tuning curve that closely matched that of suprathreshold responses. This can be attributed to a selective amplification of cortical cells' responses at preferred frequencies by intracortical inputs from similarly tuned neurons. Thus, weakly tuned thalamocortical inputs determine the subthreshold responding range, whereas intracortical inputs largely define the tuning. Such circuits may ensure a faithful conveyance of sensory information.
nature.com