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Brief wide-field photostimuli evoke and modulate oscillatory reverberating activity in cortical networks

Pulizzi, R.
•
Musumeci, G.
•
Van Den Haute, C.
altro
Giugliano, M.
2016
  • journal article

Periodico
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Abstract
Cell assemblies manipulation by optogenetics is pivotal to advance neuroscience and neuroengineering. In in vivo applications, photostimulation often broadly addresses a population of cells simultaneously, leading to feed-forward and to reverberating responses in recurrent microcircuits. The former arise from direct activation of targets downstream, and are straightforward to interpret. The latter are consequence of feedback connectivity and may reflect a variety of time-scales and complex dynamical properties. We investigated wide-field photostimulation in cortical networks in vitro, employing substrate-integrated microelectrode arrays and long-term cultured neuronal networks. We characterized the effect of brief light pulses, while restricting the expression of channelrhodopsin to principal neurons. We evoked robust reverberating responses, oscillating in the physiological gamma frequency range, and found that such a frequency could be reliably manipulated varying the light pulse duration, not its intensity. By pharmacology, mathematical modelling, and intracellular recordings, we conclude that gamma oscillations likely emerge as in vivo from the excitatory-inhibitory interplay and that, unexpectedly, the light stimuli transiently facilitate excitatory synaptic transmission. Of relevance for in vitro models of (dys)functional cortical microcircuitry and in vivo manipulations of cell assemblies, we give for the first time evidence of network-level consequences of the alteration of synaptic physiology by optogenetics.
DOI
10.1038/srep24701
WOS
WOS:000374488200001
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/102928
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84964666302
Diritti
open access
Soggetti
  • Settore BIO/09 - Fisi...

Web of Science© citazioni
13
Data di acquisizione
Mar 28, 2024
Visualizzazioni
2
Data di acquisizione
Apr 19, 2024
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