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Properties of γ‐frequency oscillations initiated by propagating population bursts in retrohippocampal regions of rat brain slices
Author(s) -
Funahashi Makoto,
Stewart Mark
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-7793.1998.191bz.x
Subject(s) - depolarization , neuroscience , population , physics , stimulation , stimulus (psychology) , hippocampal formation , biophysics , membrane potential , electrophysiology , local field potential , chemistry , biology , medicine , psychology , environmental health , psychotherapist
1 In the hippocampal formation in vivo , brief periods of γ‐frequency activity follow population bursts called sharp waves. The ≈200 Hz activity of the sharp wave itself may serve to enhance synaptic connections and the ≈40 Hz γ activity has been offered as a mechanism for solving the ‘binding’ problem. We describe epochs of γ‐frequency activity which follow population spikes evoked by low frequency repetitive extracellular stimuli in retrohippocampal neurons of horizontal rat brain slices. 2 γ‐Frequency activity recorded intracellularly from deep layer neurons of entorhinal cortex, presubiculum and parasubiculum consisted of one action potential correlated with each of the three to five γ cycles recorded with a proximate field potential electrode. A minority of cells exhibited only sub‐threshold γ‐frequency membrane potential oscillations (ranging from 5 to 10 mV). No cells fired more than one spike per γ cycle under any conditions. 3 The range of synchrony varied from individual cells which showed γ‐frequency firing without corresponding oscillations in close field recordings to field potential recordings of oscillations which were well correlated across regions. The lead or lag between any two retrohippocampal regions was in the direction of the conduction delay for the primary population spike, but typically was less, and approached zero milliseconds for some cycles in most cells. The level of synchrony was stable for particular stimulating conditions (intensity, stimulation rate, stimulus location). 4 The duration of the period of γ activity had the duration of a slow depolarizing potential which was mediated by NMDA receptor activation. NMDA receptor antagonists or low concentrations of AMPA receptor antagonists reduced the duration of, or completely abolished the slow potential, thereby eliminating the γ portion of the evoked response. 5 γ‐Frequency firing was eliminated by the GABA A receptor antagonist picrotoxin but small (< 5 mV) membrane potential oscillations remained after focal picrotoxin applications, and these exhibited the voltage dependence of EPSPs. Bath application of thiopental lowered the frequency of γ oscillations, confirming the involvement of GABA A receptors. 6 The GABA B receptor antagonist 2‐hydroxy‐saclofen appeared to enhance the γ activity by increasing the duration of the γ epoch and increasing the amplitude of individual γ cycles in field potential recordings. These saclofen‐induced cycles were, however, less well synchronized across regions. 7 We show that synchronous γ (40‐100 Hz) activity follows population bursts by deep layer retrohippocampal neurons in undrugged slices from rat brain. Responses from medial entorhinal, parasubicular or presubicular cells were not distinguishable. These events can be initiated by a propagating population spike. We suggest that an NMDA receptor mediated depolarization enables the network of deep layer retrohippocampal neurons to oscillate by providing a sustained excitation, the duration of which determines the duration of the γ episode. γ‐Frequency firing is primarily the result of GABA A receptor dependent inhibition during this period of sustained depolarization. Recurrent excitation appears to be inconsequential for principal cell firing, but may contribute to interneuron firing.

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