scholarly journals Optogenetic stimulation of long-range inputs and functional characterization of connectivity in patch-clamp recordings in mouse brain slices

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis Richevaux ◽  
Louise Schenberg ◽  
Mathieu Beraneck ◽  
Desdemona Fricker

Knowledge of cell type specific synaptic connectivity is a crucial prerequisite for understanding brain wide neuronal circuits. The functional investigation of long-range connections requires targeted recordings of single neurons combined with the specific stimulation of identified distant inputs. This is often difficult to achieve with conventional, electrical stimulation techniques, because axons from converging upstream brain areas may intermingle in the target region. The stereotaxic targeting of a specific brain region for virus-mediated expression of light sensitive ion channels allows to selectively stimulate axons coming from that region with light. Intracerebral stereotaxic injections can be used in well-delimited structures, such as the anterodorsal thalamic nuclei, and also in other subcortical or cortical areas throughout the brain. Here we describe a set of techniques for precise stereotaxic injection of viral vectors expressing channelrhodopsin in the anterodorsal thalamus, followed by photostimulation of their axon terminals in hippocampal slices. In combination with whole-cell patch clamp recording from a postsynaptically connected presubicular neuron, photostimulation of thalamic axons allows the detection of functional synaptic connections, their pharmacological characterization, and the evaluation of their strength in the brain slice preparation. We demonstrate that axons originating in the anterodorsal thalamus ramify densely in presubicular layers 1 and 3. The photostimulation of Chronos expressing thalamic axon terminals in presubiculum initiates short latency postsynaptic responses in a presubicular layer3 neuron, indicating a monosynaptic connection. In addition, biocytin filling of the recorded neuron and posthoc revelation confirms the layer localization and pyramidal morphology of the postsynaptic neuron. Taken together, the optogenetic stimulation of long-range inputs in ex vivo brain slices is a useful method to determine the cell-type specific functional connectivity from distant brain regions.

eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhishek De ◽  
Yasmine El-Shamayleh ◽  
Gregory D Horwitz

Optogenetic techniques for neural inactivation are valuable for linking neural activity to behavior but they have serious limitations in macaques. To achieve powerful and temporally precise neural inactivation, we used an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector carrying the channelrhodopsin-2 gene under the control of a Dlx5/6 enhancer, which restricts expression to GABAergic neurons. We tested this approach in the primary visual cortex, an area where neural inactivation leads to interpretable behavioral deficits. Optical stimulation modulated spiking activity and reduced visual sensitivity profoundly in the region of space represented by the stimulated neurons. Rebound firing, which can have unwanted effects on neural circuits following inactivation, was not observed, and the efficacy of the optogenetic manipulation on behavior was maintained across >1000 trials. We conclude that this inhibitory cell-type-specific optogenetic approach is a powerful and spatiotemporally precise neural inactivation tool with broad utility for probing the functional contributions of cortical activity in macaques.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 1746-1754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tsuyoshi Inoue ◽  
Keiji Imoto

Thalamocortical (TC) cells in the ventrobasal thalamus make direct excitatory connections with regular-spiking (RS) cells in layer 4 of the somatosensory cortex, but also make disynaptic feedforward inhibitory connections with the RS cells by layer 4 fast-spiking (FS) cells. In this study, we investigated connection rules of the feedforward inhibitory circuit from multiple TC cells to multiple RS cells, at the level of synaptic potentials. Using thalamocortical brain slices of young mice (postnatal days 12–16), we made simultaneous patch-clamp recordings from three adjacent cortical cells (two RS cells and one FS cell), combined with minimal stimulation of presumed single TC fibers. We found that nearly all (97%) of TC fibers, which generated excitatory inputs onto RS cells, also generated divergent excitatory inputs onto adjacent FS cells. Some 44% of TC fibers generated divergent excitatory inputs onto adjacent pairs of RS cells. We then combined the triple patch-clamp recording with multisite (two to three) minimal stimulation of single TC fibers and found that 86% of FS cells received convergent inputs from all of the stimulated TC fibers. We also found that 68% of FS cells generated divergent inhibitory inputs onto adjacent pairs of RS cells. The results indicate that spikes in TC cells, which excite RS cells, also excite adjacent FS cells with high fidelity. The results also indicate that FS cells receive convergent excitatory inputs from multiple TC cells and then send divergent inhibitory outputs to multiple RS cells.


Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 372 (6537) ◽  
pp. eabf4740
Author(s):  
K. Schmack ◽  
M. Bosc ◽  
T. Ott ◽  
J. F. Sturgill ◽  
A. Kepecs

Hallucinations, a central symptom of psychotic disorders, are attributed to excessive dopamine in the brain. However, the neural circuit mechanisms by which dopamine produces hallucinations remain elusive, largely because hallucinations have been challenging to study in model organisms. We developed a task to quantify hallucination-like perception in mice. Hallucination-like percepts, defined as high-confidence false detections, increased after hallucination-related manipulations in mice and correlated with self-reported hallucinations in humans. Hallucination-like percepts were preceded by elevated striatal dopamine levels, could be induced by optogenetic stimulation of mesostriatal dopamine neurons, and could be reversed by the antipsychotic drug haloperidol. These findings reveal a causal role for dopamine-dependent striatal circuits in hallucination-like perception and open new avenues to develop circuit-based treatments for psychotic disorders.


Gene Therapy ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 575-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
J P Chhatwal ◽  
S E Hammack ◽  
A M Jasnow ◽  
D G Rainnie ◽  
K J Ressler

1999 ◽  
Vol 276 (6) ◽  
pp. G1363-G1372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vinzenz M. Stepan ◽  
Chris J. Dickinson ◽  
John del Valle ◽  
Masashi Matsushima ◽  
Andrea Todisco

Gastrin (G17) has a CCKBreceptor-mediated growth-promoting effect on the AR42J rat acinar cell line that is linked to induction of both mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and c- fos gene expression. We investigated the mechanisms that regulate the growth factor action of G17 on the rat pituitary adenoma cell line GH3. Both AR42J and GH3cells displayed equal levels of CCKBreceptor expression and similar binding kinetics of125I-labeled G17. G17 stimulation of cell proliferation was identical in both cell lines. G17 stimulation of GH3cell proliferation was completely blocked by the CCKBreceptor antagonist D2 but not by the MEK inhibitor PD-98059 or the protein kinase C inhibitor GF-109203X, which completely inhibited G17 induction of AR42J cell proliferation. G17 induced a c- fos SRE-luciferase reporter gene plasmid more than fourfold in the AR42J cells, whereas it had no effect in the GH3cells. In contrast to what we observed in the AR42J cells, G17 failed to stimulate MAPK activation and Shc tyrosyl phosphorylation and association with the adapter protein Grb2. Epidermal growth factor induced the MAPK pathway in the GH3cells, demonstrating the integrity of this signaling system. G17 induced Ca2+mobilization in both the GH3and AR42J cells. The calmodulin inhibitor N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide inhibited AR42J cell proliferation by 20%, whereas it completely blocked G17 induction of GH3cell growth. The Ca2+ionophore ionomycin stimulated GH3cell proliferation to a level similar to that observed in response to G17, but it had no effect on AR42J cell proliferation. Thus there are cell type specific differences in the requirement of the MAPK pathway for the growth factor action of G17. Whereas in the AR42J cells G17 stimulates cell growth through activation of MAPK and c- fos gene expression, in the GH3cells, G17 fails to activate MAPK, and it induces cell proliferation through Ca2+-dependent signaling pathways. Furthermore, induction of Ca2+mobilization in the AR42J cells appears not to be sufficient to sustain cell proliferation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin A. Murphy ◽  
Matthew I. Banks

ABSTRACTBackgroundWhile their behavioral effects are well-characterized, the mechanisms by which anaesthetics induce loss of consciousness are largely unknown. Anaesthetics may disrupt integration and propagation of information in corticothalamic networks. Recent studies have shown that isoflurane diminishes synaptic responses of thalamocortical (TC) and corticocortical (CC) afferents in a pathway-specific manner. However, whether the synaptic effects of isoflurane observed in extracellular recordings persist at the cellular level has yet to be explored.MethodsHere, we activate TC and CC layer 1 inputs in non-primary mouse neocortex in ex vivo brain slices and explore the degree to which isoflurane modulates synaptic responses in pyramidal cells and in two inhibitory cell populations, somatostatin-positive (SOM+) and parvalbumin-positive (PV+) interneurons.ResultsWe show that the effects of isoflurane on synaptic responses and intrinsic properties of these cells varies among cell type and by cortical layer. Layer 1 inputs to L4 pyramidal cells were suppressed by isoflurane at both TC and CC synapses, while those to L2/3 pyramidal cells and PV+ interneurons were not. TC inputs to SOM+ cells were rarely observed at all, while CC inputs to SOM+ interneurons were robustly suppressed by isoflurane.ConclusionsThese results suggest a mechanism by which isoflurane disrupts integration and propagation of thalamocortical and intracortical signals.


Neurogenesis ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. e1122699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Shing Shun Li ◽  
Grace Ji-eun Shin ◽  
S Sean Millard

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jay W. Reddy ◽  
Maya Lassiter ◽  
Maysamreza Chamanzar

Abstract Targeted light delivery into biological tissue is needed in applications such as optogenetic stimulation of the brain and in vivo functional or structural imaging of tissue. These applications require very compact, soft, and flexible implants that minimize damage to the tissue. Here, we demonstrate a novel implantable photonic platform based on a high-density, flexible array of ultracompact (30 μm × 5 μm), low-loss (3.2 dB/cm at λ = 680 nm, 4.1 dB/cm at λ = 633 nm, 4.9 dB/cm at λ = 532 nm, 6.1 dB/cm at λ = 450 nm) optical waveguides composed of biocompatible polymers Parylene C and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). This photonic platform features unique embedded input/output micromirrors that redirect light from the waveguides perpendicularly to the surface of the array for localized, patterned illumination in tissue. This architecture enables the design of a fully flexible, compact integrated photonic system for applications such as in vivo chronic optogenetic stimulation of brain activity.


Immunity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-333.e6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyu Liu ◽  
Daniel P. Nemeth ◽  
Daniel B. McKim ◽  
Ling Zhu ◽  
Damon J. DiSabato ◽  
...  

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