We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Testing the Efficacy of Single-Cell Stimulation in Biasing Presubicular Head Direction Activity.
- Authors
Coletta, Stefano; Frey, Markus; Nasr, Khaled; Preston-Ferrer, Patricia; Burgalossi, Andrea
- Abstract
To support navigation, the firing of head direction (HD) neurons must be tightly anchored to the external space. Indeed, inputs from external landmarks can rapidly reset the preferred direction of HD cells. Landmark stimuli have often been simulated as excitatory inputs from "visual cells" (encoding landmark information) to the HD attractor network; when excitatory visual inputs are sufficiently strong, preferred directions switch abruptly to the landmark location. In the present work, we tested whether mimicking such inputs via juxtacellular stimulation would be sufficient for shifting the tuning of individual presubicular HD cells recorded in passively rotated male rats. We recorded 81 HD cells in a cue-rich environment, and evoked spikes trains outside of their preferred direction (distance range, 11-178°). We found that HD tuning was remarkably resistant to activity manipulations. Even strong stimulations, which induced seconds-long spike trains, failed to induce a detectable shift in directional tuning. HD tuning curves before and after stimulation remained highly correlated, indicating that postsynaptic activation alone is insufficient for modifying HD output. Our data are thus consistent with the predicted stability of an HD attractor network when anchored to external landmarks. A small spiking bias at the stimulus direction could only be observed in a visually deprived environment in which both average firing rates and directional tuning were markedly reduced. Based on this evidence, we speculate that, when attractor dynamics become unstable (e.g., under disorientation), the output of HD neurons could be more efficiently controlled by strong biasing stimuli.
- Subjects
NEURONS; TUNING (Machinery); NAILS (Hardware); DYNAMICS; POSTSYNAPTIC potential
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2018, Vol 38, Issue 13, p3287
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1814-17.2018