Vijayan Sujith, Hale Greg J, Moore Christopher I, Brown Emery N, Wilson Matthew
Program in Neuroscience, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2010 Apr;103(4):2074-84. doi: 10.1152/jn.00474.2009. Epub 2010 Feb 17.
The rate at which neurons fire has wide-reaching implications for the coding schemes used by neural systems. Despite the extensive use of the barrel cortex as a model system, relatively few studies have examined the rate of sensory activity in single neurons in freely moving animals. We examined the activity of barrel cortex neurons in behaving animals during sensory cue interaction, during non-stimulus-related activity, during various states of sleep, and during the administration of isoflurane. The activity of regular-spiking units (RSUs: predominantly excitatory neurons) and fast spiking units (FSUs: a subtype of inhibitory interneurons) was examined separately. We characterized activity by calculating neural firing rates, because several reports have emphasized the low firing rates in this system, reporting that both baseline activity and stimulus evoked activity is <1 Hz. We report that, during sensory cue interaction or non-stimulus-related activity, the majority of RSUs in rat barrel cortex fired at rates significantly >1 Hz, with 27.4% showing rates above 10 Hz during cue interaction. Even during slow wave sleep, which had the lowest mean and median firing rates of any nonanesthetized state observed, 80.0% of RSUs fired above 1 Hz. During all of the nonanesthetized states observed 100% of the FSUs fired well above 1 Hz. When rats were administered isoflurane and at a depth of anesthesia used in standard in vivo electrophysiological preparations, all of the RSUs fired below 1 Hz. We also found that >80% of RSUs either upmodulated or downmodulated their firing during cue interaction. These data suggest that low firing rates do not typify the output of the barrel cortex during awake activity and during sleep and indicate that sensory coding at both the individual and population levels may be nonsparse.
神经元的放电频率对神经系统所采用的编码方案有着广泛影响。尽管桶状皮层被广泛用作模型系统,但相对较少的研究考察了自由活动动物单个神经元的感觉活动频率。我们研究了行为动物在感觉线索交互期间、非刺激相关活动期间、各种睡眠状态期间以及异氟烷给药期间桶状皮层神经元的活动。分别对规则发放神经元(RSUs:主要为兴奋性神经元)和快速发放神经元(FSUs:抑制性中间神经元的一种亚型)的活动进行了研究。我们通过计算神经放电频率来表征活动,因为有几份报告强调了该系统中的低放电频率,称基线活动和刺激诱发活动均<1 Hz。我们报告称,在感觉线索交互或非刺激相关活动期间,大鼠桶状皮层中的大多数RSUs放电频率显著>1 Hz,在线索交互期间有27.4%的RSUs放电频率高于10 Hz。即使在慢波睡眠期间(这是观察到的所有非麻醉状态中平均和中位数放电频率最低的),80.0%的RSUs放电频率高于1 Hz。在所有观察到的非麻醉状态下,100%的FSUs放电频率远高于1 Hz。当给大鼠使用异氟烷并处于标准体内电生理实验所用的麻醉深度时,所有RSUs放电频率均低于1 Hz。我们还发现,>80%的RSUs在线索交互期间要么上调要么下调其放电频率。这些数据表明,低放电频率并非清醒活动和睡眠期间桶状皮层输出的典型特征,并表明个体和群体水平的感觉编码可能并非稀疏编码。