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Cortical Intrinsic Circuits Can Support Activity Propagation through an Isofrequency Strip of the Guinea Pig Primary Auditory Cortex
Author(s) -
WenJie Song,
Hideo Kawaguchi,
Shinichiro Totoki,
Yuji Inoue,
Takusige Katura,
Shinichi Maeda,
Shinji Inagaki,
Hiroshi Shirasawa,
Masataka Nishimura
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
cerebral cortex
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.694
H-Index - 250
eISSN - 1460-2199
pISSN - 1047-3211
DOI - 10.1093/cercor/bhj018
Subject(s) - tone (literature) , auditory cortex , neuroscience , thalamus , premovement neuronal activity , in vivo , electrophysiology , guinea pig , cortex (anatomy) , pulse (music) , chemistry , anatomy , psychology , physics , biology , optics , art , literature , microbiology and biotechnology , detector , endocrinology
A pure tone evokes propagating activities in a strip of the primary auditory cortex (AI), an isofrequency strip (IS). A fundamental issue concerns the roles that thalamocortical input and intracortical connectivity play in generating the activities. Here we addressed this issue in guinea pigs using in vivo and in vitro real-time optical imaging techniques. As reported previously, tone-evoked activity propagated dorsoventrally along a strip (an IS) in AI. We found that an electrical pulse applied focally within the strip, triggered activity propagation with a spatiotemporal pattern highly similar to tone-evoked activation. The propagation velocity of electrically evoked activity was significantly slower than that of tone-evoked activity, but was comparable to the velocity of lateral activity propagation in cortical slices, suggesting that the electrically evoked activity propagation in vivo is mediated by intracortical circuits. To test this notion, we lesioned the auditory thalamus chemically; in such animals, electrically evoked activity in AI was not affected, although tone-evoked activity was abolished. Further, in slices of the AI, the extent of electrically evoked activity propagation in layer II/III was significantly larger in coronal slices than in horizontal slices. Together, our results suggest that intracortical connectivity in AI enables a focally evoked activity to propagate throughout an IS.

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