Emmons Eric B, De Corte Benjamin J, Kim Youngcho, Parker Krystal L, Matell Matthew S, Narayanan Nandakumar S
Department of Neurology and.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Sep 6;37(36):8718-8733. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1376-17.2017. Epub 2017 Aug 8.
Although frontostriatal circuits are critical for the temporal control of action, how time is encoded in frontostriatal circuits is unknown. We recorded from frontal and striatal neurons while rats engaged in interval timing, an elementary cognitive function that engages both areas. We report four main results. First, "ramping" activity, a monotonic change in neuronal firing rate across time, is observed throughout frontostriatal ensembles. Second, frontostriatal activity scales across multiple intervals. Third, striatal ramping neurons are correlated with activity of the medial frontal cortex. Finally, interval timing and striatal ramping activity are disrupted when the medial frontal cortex is inactivated. Our results support the view that striatal neurons integrate medial frontal activity and are consistent with drift-diffusion models of interval timing. This principle elucidates temporal processing in frontostriatal circuits and provides insight into how the medial frontal cortex exerts top-down control of cognitive processing in the striatum. The ability to guide actions in time is essential to mammalian behavior from rodents to humans. The prefrontal cortex and striatum are critically involved in temporal processing and share extensive neuronal connections, yet it remains unclear how these structures represent time. We studied these two brain areas in rodents performing interval-timing tasks and found that time-dependent "ramping" activity, a monotonic increase or decrease in neuronal activity, was a key temporal signal. Furthermore, we found that striatal ramping activity was correlated with and dependent upon medial frontal activity. These results provide insight into information-processing principles in frontostriatal circuits.
尽管额纹状体回路对动作的时间控制至关重要,但时间在额纹状体回路中是如何编码的尚不清楚。我们在大鼠进行间隔计时时记录了额叶和纹状体神经元的活动,间隔计时是一种涉及这两个脑区的基本认知功能。我们报告了四个主要结果。第一,在整个额纹状体神经元集群中观察到了“斜坡式”活动,即神经元放电率随时间的单调变化。第二,额纹状体活动在多个时间间隔内呈比例变化。第三,纹状体斜坡式神经元与内侧额叶皮质的活动相关。最后,当内侧额叶皮质失活时,间隔计时和纹状体斜坡式活动会受到干扰。我们的结果支持这样一种观点,即纹状体神经元整合内侧额叶的活动,并且与间隔计时的漂移扩散模型一致。这一原理阐明了额纹状体回路中的时间处理过程,并为内侧额叶皮质如何对纹状体中的认知处理施加自上而下的控制提供了见解。及时引导动作的能力对从啮齿动物到人类的哺乳动物行为至关重要。前额叶皮质和纹状体都深度参与时间处理且共享广泛的神经元连接,但这些结构如何表征时间仍不清楚。我们在执行间隔计时任务的啮齿动物中研究了这两个脑区,发现时间依赖性的“斜坡式”活动,即神经元活动的单调增加或减少,是一个关键的时间信号。此外,我们发现纹状体斜坡式活动与内侧额叶活动相关且依赖于内侧额叶活动。这些结果为额纹状体回路中的信息处理原理提供了见解。