Monk Kevin J, Allard Simon, Hussain Shuler Marshall G
Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2021 Mar 5;15:611744. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2021.611744. eCollection 2021.
Cue-evoked persistent activity is neural activity that persists beyond stimulation of a sensory cue and has been described in many regions of the brain, including primary sensory areas. Nonetheless, the functional role that persistent activity plays in primary sensory areas is enigmatic. However, one form of persistent activity in a primary sensory area is the representation of time between a visual stimulus and a water reward. This "reward timing activity"-observed within the primary visual cortex-has been implicated in informing the timing of visually cued, reward-seeking actions. Although rewarding outcomes are sufficient to engender interval timing activity within V1, it is unclear to what extent cue-evoked persistent activity exists outside of reward conditioning, and whether temporal relationships to other outcomes (such as behaviorally neutral or aversive outcomes) are able to engender timing activity. Here we describe the existence of cue-evoked persistent activity in mouse V1 following three conditioning strategies: pseudo-conditioning (where unpaired, monocular visual stimuli are repeatedly presented to an animal), neutral conditioning (where monocular visual stimuli are paired with a binocular visual stimulus, at a delay), and aversive conditioning (where monocular visual stimuli are paired with a tail shock, at a delay). We find that these conditioning strategies exhibit persistent activity that takes one of three forms, a sustained increase of activity; a sustained decrease of activity; or a delayed, transient peak of activity, as previously observed following conditioning with delayed reward. However, these conditioning strategies do not result in visually cued interval timing activity, as observed following appetitive conditioning. Moreover, we find that neutral conditioning increases the magnitude of cue-evoked responses whereas aversive conditioning strongly diminished both the response magnitude and the prevalence of cue-evoked persistent activity. These results demonstrate that cue-evoked persistent activity within V1 can exist outside of conditioning visual stimuli with delayed outcomes and that this persistent activity can be uniquely modulated across different conditioning strategies using unconditioned stimuli of varying behavioral relevance. Together, these data extend our understanding of cue-evoked persistent activity within a primary sensory cortical network and its ability to be modulated by salient outcomes.
线索诱发的持续活动是指在感觉线索刺激结束后仍持续存在的神经活动,在包括初级感觉区域在内的大脑许多区域都有描述。尽管如此,持续活动在初级感觉区域中所起的功能作用仍不清楚。然而,初级感觉区域中一种形式的持续活动是对视觉刺激和水奖励之间时间的表征。这种在初级视觉皮层中观察到的“奖励定时活动”与为视觉提示的、寻求奖励的行为计时有关。虽然奖励结果足以在V1内产生间隔定时活动,但尚不清楚线索诱发的持续活动在奖励条件作用之外存在的程度,以及与其他结果(如行为中性或厌恶结果)的时间关系是否能够产生定时活动。在这里,我们描述了在小鼠V1中,通过三种条件作用策略后线索诱发的持续活动的存在:伪条件作用(将未配对的单眼视觉刺激反复呈现给动物)、中性条件作用(单眼视觉刺激与双眼视觉刺激延迟配对)和厌恶条件作用(单眼视觉刺激与尾部电击延迟配对)。我们发现,这些条件作用策略表现出持续活动,其形式有三种:活动持续增加;活动持续减少;或活动延迟、短暂峰值,这与之前延迟奖励条件作用后观察到的情况相同。然而,这些条件作用策略不会像在食欲性条件作用后观察到的那样导致视觉提示的间隔定时活动。此外,我们发现中性条件作用增加了线索诱发反应的幅度,而厌恶条件作用则强烈降低了反应幅度和线索诱发持续活动的发生率。这些结果表明,V1内的线索诱发持续活动可以在延迟结果的视觉刺激条件作用之外存在,并且这种持续活动可以通过使用具有不同行为相关性的非条件刺激,在不同的条件作用策略中得到独特的调节。总之,这些数据扩展了我们对初级感觉皮层网络内线索诱发持续活动及其被显著结果调节能力的理解。