Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Neuroscience. 2010 Mar 17;166(2):698-711. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.12.048. Epub 2009 Dec 29.
Cerebral cortical slow-wave activity (SWA) is prominent during sleep and also during ketamine-induced anesthesia. SWA in electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings is closely linked to prominent fluctuations between up- and down-states in the membrane potential of pyramidal neurons. However, little is known about how the cerebellum is linked into SWA and whether slow cortical oscillations influence sensory cerebellar responses. To examine these issues, we simultaneously recorded EEG activity from the cerebral cortex (SI, MI, and supplementary motor area (SMA)), local field potentials at the input stage of cerebellar processing in the cerebellar granule cell layer (GCL) and inferior olive (IO), and single unit activity at the output stage of the cerebellum in the deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN). We found that in ketamine-anesthetized rats, SWA was synchronized between all recorded cortical areas and was phase locked with local field potentials of the GCL, IO and single unit activity in the DCN. We also found that cortical up-states are linked to activation of GCL neurons but to inhibition of cerebellar output from the DCN, with the latter an effect likely mediated by Purkinje cells. A partial coherence analysis showed further that a large portion of SWA shared between GCL and DCN was transmitted from the cortex, since the coherence shared between GCL and DCN was diminished when the effect of cortical activity was subtracted. To determine the causal flow of information between structures, a directed transfer function was calculated between the simultaneous activities of SI, MI, SMA, GCL and DCN. This analysis demonstrated that the primary direction of information flow was from cortex to the cerebellum and that SI had a stronger influence than other cortical areas on DCN activity. The strong functional connectivity with SI in particular is in agreement with previous findings of a strong cortical component in cerebellar sensory responses.
大脑皮层慢波活动(SWA)在睡眠期间和氯胺酮诱导的麻醉期间都很明显。脑电图(EEG)记录中的 SWA 与锥体神经元膜电位的上下状态之间的显著波动密切相关。然而,人们对小脑如何与 SWA 联系以及皮质慢振荡是否影响感觉小脑反应知之甚少。为了研究这些问题,我们同时记录了大脑皮层(SI、MI 和辅助运动区(SMA)的脑电图活动)、小脑处理输入阶段的局部场电位(小脑颗粒细胞层(GCL)和下橄榄核(IO))和小脑深部核团(DCN)的输出阶段的单个单位活动。我们发现,在氯胺酮麻醉的大鼠中,所有记录的皮层区域之间的 SWA 是同步的,并且与 GCL 的局部场电位、IO 和 DCN 中的单个单位活动相位锁定。我们还发现,皮层上状态与 GCL 神经元的激活有关,但与小脑从 DCN 的输出抑制有关,后者可能是由浦肯野细胞介导的。部分相干分析进一步表明,GCL 和 DCN 之间共享的大量 SWA 是从皮层传输的,因为当减去皮层活动的影响时,GCL 和 DCN 之间共享的相干性降低。为了确定结构之间信息的因果流向,我们在 SI、MI、SMA、GCL 和 DCN 的同时活动之间计算了一个有向传递函数。该分析表明,信息的主要流向是从皮层到小脑,并且 SI 对 DCN 活动的影响比其他皮层区域更强。与以前的研究结果一致,特别是与 SI 的强烈功能连接表明小脑感觉反应中有很强的皮层成分。