Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Mapping of Functionally Characterized Cell Classes onto Canonical Circuit Operations in Primate Prefrontal Cortex

View through CrossRef
Microcircuits are composed of multiple cell classes that likely serve unique circuit operations. But how cell classes map onto circuit functions is largely unknown, particularly for primate prefrontal cortex during actual goal-directed behavior. One difficulty in this quest is to reliably distinguish cell classes in extracellular recordings of action potentials. Here we surmount this issue and report that spike shape and neural firing variability provide reliable markers to segregate seven functional classes of prefrontal cells in macaques engaged in an attention task. We delineate an unbiased clustering protocol that identifies four broad spiking (BS) putative pyramidal cell classes and three narrow spiking (NS) putative inhibitory cell classes dissociated by how sparse, bursty, or regular they fire. We speculate that these functional classes map onto canonical circuit functions. First, two BS classes show sparse, bursty firing, and phase synchronize their spiking to 3–7 Hz (theta) and 12–20 Hz (beta) frequency bands of the local field potential (LFP). These properties make cells flexibly responsive to network activation at varying frequencies. Second, one NS and two BS cell classes show regular firing and higher rate with only marginal synchronization preference. These properties are akin to setting tonically the excitation and inhibition balance. Finally, two NS classes fired irregularly and synchronized to either theta or beta LFP fluctuations, tuning them potentially to frequency-specific subnetworks. These results suggest that a limited set of functional cell classes emerges in macaque prefrontal cortex (PFC) during attentional engagement to not only represent information, but to subserve basic circuit operations.
Title: Mapping of Functionally Characterized Cell Classes onto Canonical Circuit Operations in Primate Prefrontal Cortex
Description:
Microcircuits are composed of multiple cell classes that likely serve unique circuit operations.
But how cell classes map onto circuit functions is largely unknown, particularly for primate prefrontal cortex during actual goal-directed behavior.
One difficulty in this quest is to reliably distinguish cell classes in extracellular recordings of action potentials.
Here we surmount this issue and report that spike shape and neural firing variability provide reliable markers to segregate seven functional classes of prefrontal cells in macaques engaged in an attention task.
We delineate an unbiased clustering protocol that identifies four broad spiking (BS) putative pyramidal cell classes and three narrow spiking (NS) putative inhibitory cell classes dissociated by how sparse, bursty, or regular they fire.
We speculate that these functional classes map onto canonical circuit functions.
First, two BS classes show sparse, bursty firing, and phase synchronize their spiking to 3–7 Hz (theta) and 12–20 Hz (beta) frequency bands of the local field potential (LFP).
These properties make cells flexibly responsive to network activation at varying frequencies.
Second, one NS and two BS cell classes show regular firing and higher rate with only marginal synchronization preference.
These properties are akin to setting tonically the excitation and inhibition balance.
Finally, two NS classes fired irregularly and synchronized to either theta or beta LFP fluctuations, tuning them potentially to frequency-specific subnetworks.
These results suggest that a limited set of functional cell classes emerges in macaque prefrontal cortex (PFC) during attentional engagement to not only represent information, but to subserve basic circuit operations.

Related Results

MARS-seq2.0: an experimental and analytical pipeline for indexed sorting combined with single-cell RNA sequencing v1
MARS-seq2.0: an experimental and analytical pipeline for indexed sorting combined with single-cell RNA sequencing v1
Human tissues comprise trillions of cells that populate a complex space of molecular phenotypes and functions and that vary in abundance by 4–9 orders of magnitude. Relying solely ...
44 Functional Connectivity In The Default Mode Network Of ASD and ADHD
44 Functional Connectivity In The Default Mode Network Of ASD and ADHD
Objective:Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are neurodevelopmental disorders with overlapping symptomatology and shared genetic ma...
The human entorhinal cortex: A cytoarchitectonic analysis
The human entorhinal cortex: A cytoarchitectonic analysis
AbstractThe entorhinal cortex of man is in the medial aspect of the temporal lobe. As in other mammalian species, it constitutes an essential component of the hippocampal formation...
Simulation modeling study on short circuit ability of distribution transformer
Simulation modeling study on short circuit ability of distribution transformer
Abstract Under short circuit condition, the oil immersed distribution transformer will endure combined electro-thermal stress, eventually lead to the mechanical dama...
PO-156 Effects of acute hypoxic exercise on TRPV4 channels in prefrontal cortex of rats
PO-156 Effects of acute hypoxic exercise on TRPV4 channels in prefrontal cortex of rats
Objective At the early stage of high altitude training, the decrease of motor ability caused by hypoxia makes it impossible for the training to be carried out normally. Since 90s, ...
Are the Anterior and Mid-Cingulate Cortices Distinct in Rodents?
Are the Anterior and Mid-Cingulate Cortices Distinct in Rodents?
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is involved in cognitive control, emotional regulation, and motivation. In this Perspective article, we discuss the nomenclature of the subdivisions of ...

Back to Top