Doose Jens, Doron Guy, Brecht Michael, Lindner Benjamin
Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, 12489 Berlin, Germany, and.
J Neurosci. 2016 Oct 26;36(43):11120-11132. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0787-16.2016.
Single cells in the motor and somatosensory cortex of rats were stimulated in vivo with broadband fluctuating currents applied juxtacellularly. Unlike the DC current steps used previously, fluctuating stimulation currents reliably evoked spike trains with precise timing of individual spikes. Fluctuating currents resulted in strong cellular responses at stimulation frequencies beyond the inverse membrane time constant and the mean firing rate of the neuron. Neuronal firing was associated with high rates of information transmission, even for the high-frequency components of the stimulus. Such response characteristics were also revealed in additional experiments with sinusoidal juxtacellular stimulation. For selected cells, we could reproduce these statistics with compartmental models of varying complexity. We also developed a method to generate Gaussian stimuli that evoke spike trains with prescribed spike times (under the constraint of a certain rate and coefficient of variation) and exemplify its ability to achieve precise and reliable spiking in cortical neurons in vivo Our results demonstrate a novel method for precise control of spike timing by juxtacellular stimulation, confirm and extend earlier conclusions from ex vivo work about the capacity of cortical neurons to generate precise discharges, and contribute to the understanding of the biophysics of information transfer of single neurons in vivo at high frequencies.
Nanostimulation of single identified neurons in vivo can control spike frequency parametrically and, surprisingly, can even bias the animal's behavioral response. Here, we extend this stimulation protocol to time-dependent broadband noise stimulation in sensory and motor cortices of rat. In response to such stimuli, we found increased temporal spike-time reliability. The information transmission properties reveal, both experimentally and theoretically, that the neurons support high-frequency stimulation beyond the inverse membrane time. Generating a stimulus using the neuron's response properties, we could evoke prescribed spike times with high precision. Our work helps to establish a novel method for precise temporal control of single-cell spiking and provides a simplified biophysical description of single-neuron spiking under time-dependent in vivo-like stimulation.
在大鼠的运动和体感皮层中,通过细胞旁施加宽带波动电流对单个细胞进行体内刺激。与先前使用的直流电流阶跃不同,波动的刺激电流可靠地诱发了具有精确单个尖峰时间的尖峰序列。波动电流在超过逆膜时间常数和神经元平均放电率的刺激频率下导致强烈的细胞反应。即使对于刺激的高频成分,神经元放电也与高信息传输率相关。在额外的正弦细胞旁刺激实验中也揭示了这种反应特性。对于选定的细胞,我们可以用不同复杂程度的房室模型重现这些统计数据。我们还开发了一种生成高斯刺激的方法,该方法能诱发具有规定尖峰时间的尖峰序列(在一定速率和变异系数的约束下),并举例说明了其在体内皮层神经元中实现精确可靠尖峰的能力。我们的结果证明了一种通过细胞旁刺激精确控制尖峰时间的新方法,证实并扩展了早期离体研究关于皮层神经元产生精确放电能力的结论,并有助于理解体内单个神经元在高频下信息传递的生物物理学。
对体内单个已识别神经元的纳米刺激可以参数化地控制尖峰频率,令人惊讶的是,甚至可以使动物的行为反应产生偏差。在这里,我们将这种刺激方案扩展到大鼠感觉和运动皮层中随时间变化的宽带噪声刺激。响应这种刺激,我们发现尖峰时间的可靠性增加。信息传输特性在实验和理论上都表明,神经元支持超过逆膜时间的高频刺激。利用神经元的反应特性生成刺激,我们可以高精度地诱发规定的尖峰时间。我们的工作有助于建立一种精确控制单细胞尖峰时间的新方法,并提供了在类似体内随时间变化的刺激下单个神经元尖峰的简化生物物理学描述。