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1.
J Physiol Paris ; 102(4-6): 173-80, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18996475

ABSTRACT

Electrosensory systems comprise extensive feedback pathways. It is also well known that these pathways exhibit synaptic plasticity on a wide-range of time scales. Recent in vitro brain slice studies have characterized synaptic plasticity in the two main feedback pathways to the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL), a primary electrosensory nucleus in Apteronotus leptorhynchus. Currently-used slice preparations, involving networks in open-loop conditions, allow feedback inputs to be studied in isolation, a critical step in determining their synaptic properties. However, to fully understand electrosensory processing, we must understand how dynamic feedback modulates neuronal responses under closed-loop conditions. To bridge the gap between current in vitro approaches and more complex in vivo work, we present two new in vitro approaches for studying the roles of closed-loop feedback in electrosensory processing. The first involves a hybrid-network approach using dynamic clamp, and the second involves a new slice preparation that preserves one of the feedback pathways to ELL in a closed-loop condition.


Subject(s)
Electric Fish/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Feedback, Physiological/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Animals , Electric Fish/anatomy & histology , In Vitro Techniques , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/anatomy & histology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Synapses/physiology
2.
J Exp Biol ; 210(Pt 24): 4437-47, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18055632

ABSTRACT

The cancellation of self-generated components of sensory inputs is a key function of sensory feedback pathways. In many systems, cerebellar parallel fiber feedback mediates this cancellation through anti-Hebbian plasticity, resulting in the generation of a negative image of the reafferent inputs. Parallel fiber feedback involves direct excitation and disynaptic inhibition as well as synaptic plasticity on multiple time scales. How the dynamics of these processes interact with anti-Hebbian plasticity to shape synaptic inputs and provide a cancellation mechanism remains unclear. In the present study, we investigated the influence of parallel fiber feedback onto pyramidal neurons of the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) in weakly electric fish under open loop conditions. We mimicked naturalistic parallel fiber inputs in an ELL brain slice by implementing an experimentally based model of this synaptic pathway using dynamic clamp. We showed that as parallel fiber activity increases, the effective input to ELL pyramidal neurons changes from net excitation to net inhibition, resulting in a non-monotonic firing response. Using a model neuron, we found that this robust non-monotonic response is due to a shift from balanced excitation and inhibition at low parallel fiber input rates, to dominant inhibition at high input rates. We then showed that this non-monotonic response provides a simple basis for negative image generation. Through changes in the mean activation rate of parallel fibers, the feedback can switch roles between enhancement and suppression of sensory inputs in a manner that is directly determined by the slope of the non-monotonic response curve.


Subject(s)
Electric Fish/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Feedback , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Electric Conductivity , Models, Biological , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Pyramidal Cells/metabolism , Synapses/metabolism
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