Wiener S I
CNRS-Collège de France Laboratoire de Physiologie, Paris.
J Neurosci. 1993 Sep;13(9):3802-17. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.13-09-03802.1993.
To investigate the spatial and behavioral correlates of striatal neurons during displacement movements, the rostromedial dorsal striata (AP 1.0-2.2, ML 1.5-2.0) of five rats were surgically implanted with advanceable bundles of fine wire electrodes. After recovery, the rats were deprived of water and trained in a square-walled open field in a dark room. The behavioral task required alternating visits to water reservoirs in the center and in the four corners. A certain corner contained the first reward for each trial; after this reward, a cue card appeared in this corner for the rest of the trial. The firing rates of striatal units were compared as the rat moved between the center and the four corners of the arena. Analyses were made of 30 units. Eight of these had firing rates that significantly increased or decreased by 62-480% while the rat was in one or more quadrants of the arena. Six of these manifested such firing rate changes only as the rat performed certain behavioral sequences in the quadrant. Three other units fired as the rat's head was in a certain orientation relative to the arena walls, in all parts of the arena. To determine the principal controlling cues and hence the frame of reference of spatial selectivity of these units, the arena, while the rat was still inside, was rotated in total darkness. The first water reward was then presented at the same position relative to the outside room as before the rotation. The cue card was then illuminated in this corner as a visual cue for the extra-arena reference frame. All 11 neurons demonstrated spatial selectivity that rotated with the arena; thus, this activity was in the frame of reference of the arena and was not controlled by the visual cue. Six other units fired at rates up to six times their resting discharge or stopped firing completely in synchrony with initiation or execution of displacement movements, and two of these were also location selective. Four other units were silent as the rat performed the task, but fired tonically following arena rotations or other interruptions of the session, independent of the rat's location or movements. Nine analyzed units had very low firing rates (< 1 impulse/sec) and showed no discernible changes in activity as the rat performed the task. These patterns of unit activity indicate that fundamental informational components required for navigation are coded in the striatum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
为研究移位运动过程中纹状体神经元的空间和行为相关性,对5只大鼠的吻内侧背侧纹状体(前后位置1.0 - 2.2,内外侧位置1.5 - 2.0)进行手术植入可推进的细丝电极束。恢复后,大鼠断水,并在暗室的方形围墙开放场地中进行训练。行为任务要求大鼠交替前往场地中心和四个角落的水槽。每个角落在每次试验中都包含第一个奖励;在给予该奖励后,该角落会出现一张提示卡,直至试验结束。当大鼠在场地中心和四个角落之间移动时,比较纹状体神经元单位的放电频率。对30个神经元单位进行了分析。其中8个在大鼠处于场地的一个或多个象限中时,放电频率显著增加或减少了62% - 480%。其中6个仅在大鼠在象限中执行特定行为序列时表现出这种放电频率变化。另外3个神经元单位在大鼠头部相对于场地墙壁处于特定方向时,在场地的所有区域都会放电。为确定这些神经元单位空间选择性的主要控制线索及参考框架,在大鼠仍在场地内时,于完全黑暗中旋转场地。然后在相对于外部房间与旋转前相同的位置给予第一次水奖励。接着在这个角落点亮提示卡,作为场地外参考框架的视觉线索。所有11个神经元都表现出随场地旋转而变化的空间选择性;因此,这种活动是以场地为参考框架,不受视觉线索控制。另外6个神经元单位在移位运动开始或执行时,放电频率最高可达静息放电频率的6倍,或完全停止放电,其中2个也具有位置选择性。还有4个神经元单位在大鼠执行任务时保持沉默,但在场地旋转或试验的其他中断后持续放电,与大鼠的位置或运动无关。9个被分析的神经元单位放电频率极低(<1次冲动/秒),且在大鼠执行任务时未表现出明显的活动变化。这些神经元单位活动模式表明,导航所需的基本信息成分在纹状体中进行编码。(摘要截断于400字)