Back to Search Start Over

Opposing Somatic and Dendritic Expression of Stimulus-Selective Response Plasticity in Mouse Primary Visual Cortex

Authors :
Taekeun Kim
Francesca A. Chaloner
Sam F. Cooke
Mark T. Harnett
Mark F. Bear
Source :
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, Kim, T, Chaloner, F A, Cooke, S F, Harnett, M & Bear, M F 2020, ' Opposing somatic and dendritic expression of stimulus-selective response plasticity in mouse primary visual cortex ', Frontiers in cellular neuroscience, vol. 13, 555 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2019.00555, Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, Vol 13 (2020)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Daily exposure of awake mice to a phase-reversing visual grating stimulus leads to enhancement of the visual-evoked potential (VEP) in layer 4 of the primary visual cortex (V1). This stimulus-selective response potentiation (SRP) resembles and shares mechanistic requirements with canonical long-term synaptic potentiation (LTP). However, it remains to be determined how this augmentation of a population response translates into altered neuronal activity of individual V1 neurons. To address this question, we performed longitudinal calcium imaging of layer 4 excitatory neurons in V1 and tracked changes associated with the induction and expression of SRP. We found no evidence for a net change in the fraction of visually responsive neurons as the stimulus became familiar. However, endoscopic calcium imaging of layer 4 principal neurons revealed that somatic calcium transients in response to phase-reversals of the familiar visual stimulus are reduced and undergo strong within-session adaptation. Conversely, neuropil calcium responses and VEPs are enhanced during familiar stimulus viewing, and the VEPs show reduced within-session adaptation. Consistent with the exquisite selectivity of SRP, the plasticity of cellular responses to phase-reversing gratings did not translate into altered orientation selectivity to drifting gratings. Our findings suggest a model in which augmentation of fast, short-latency synaptic (dendritic) responses, manifested as enhanced layer 4 VEPs, recruits inhibition to suppress cellular activity. Reduced cellular activity to the familiar stimulus may account for the behavioral correlate of SRP, orientation-selective long-term habituation.

Details

ISSN :
16625102
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in cellular neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10ddd813355d395a418b1c938be9d3a5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2019.00555