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Multidimensional population activity in an electrically coupled inhibitory circuit in the cerebellar cortex

Harsha Gurnani, R. Angus Silver

2021Neuron32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inhibitory neurons orchestrate the activity of excitatory neurons and play key roles in circuit function. Although individual interneurons have been studied extensively, little is known about their properties at the population level. Using random-access 3D two-photon microscopy, we imaged local populations of cerebellar Golgi cells (GoCs), which deliver inhibition to granule cells. We show that population activity is organized into multiple modes during spontaneous behaviors. A slow, network-wide common modulation of GoC activity correlates with the level of whisking and locomotion, while faster (<1 s) differential population activity, arising from spatially mixed heterogeneous GoC responses, encodes more precise information. A biologically detailed GoC circuit model reproduced the common population mode and the dimensionality observed experimentally, but these properties disappeared when electrical coupling was removed. Our results establish that local GoC circuits exhibit multidimensional activity patterns that could be used for inhibition-mediated adaptive gain control and spatiotemporal patterning of downstream granule cells.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceInhibitory postsynaptic potentialPopulationExcitatory postsynaptic potentialPremovement neuronal activityWhisking in animalsBiological neural networkCerebellar cortexNerve netCerebellumBiologyPhysicsSomatosensory systemDemographySociologyNeural dynamics and brain functionVestibular and auditory disordersNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research