Somato-dendritic coupling in layer 5 pyramidal neurons of the mouse primary visual cortex
dc.contributor.advisor
Rochefort, Nathalie
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dc.contributor.advisor
Nolan, Matthew
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dc.contributor.author
Francioni, Valerio
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dc.date.accessioned
2020-03-16T10:48:39Z
dc.date.available
2020-03-16T10:48:39Z
dc.date.issued
2020-07-07
dc.description.abstract
Cortical layer 5 excitatory neurons are characterized by long apical dendrites receiving inputs
from multiple long-range cortical and subcortical connections. In vitro and in vivo recordings
have shown that the dendrites of layer 5 pyramidal neurons support both distance-dependent
filtering and local dendritic non linearities, including NMDA, calcium and sodiummediated
spikes. Additionally, the coincident occurrence of back-propagating action
potentials and tuft depolarization was shown to generate widespread calcium transients in
the apical tuft dendrites which leads to bursts of action potentials in the soma. In the primary
visual cortex (V1), layer 5 pyramidal neurons display selective responses to physical features
of visual stimuli, such as the orientation and direction of movement. In addition, layer 5
neurons activity is gain modulated by locomotion both in darkness and during visual
stimulation. This gain modulation was shown to be mediated through a recurrent VIP-SST
cortical circuit which was suggested to produce a net disinhibition of the apical tuft dendrites
of pyramidal neurons. So far however, the dendritic activity underlying gain modulation of
layer 5 pyramidal neurons during locomotion remains unexplored. Additionally, the extent
to which dendritic activity is compartmentalised from the activity in other sibling branches
and from the activity in the soma is a matter of debate. In vitro studies suggest that apical
tuft branches should be highly compartmentalised, however in vivo studies have returned
controversial results about the extent of somato-dendritic coupling.
To address these questions, I sparsely labelled layer 5 neurons of the primary visual cortex
with a genetically-encoded calcium indicator (GCaMP6). I used multiplane, two-photon
calcium imaging to monitor the activity in different apical tuft branches and different
compartments of the neuron (soma, trunk and tuft) semi-simultaneously. I acquired data in
head-fixed mice freely running on a cylindrical treadmill both in darkness and during the
presentation of drifting gratings. Finally, I performed offline morphological reconstructions
of the neurons imaged, in order to extract anatomical information about the neurons and
dendrites I imaged.
These results showed that the apical tuft dendrites increase their activity in response to
visual stimulation and locomotion. However, I found that the activity of different sibling
branches belonging to one neuron had highly correlated activity. Branch-specific events were
rare, small, and independent of visual stimulation and locomotion. This high correlation
persisted not only between different apical tuft branches, but also between different
compartments of the neurons showing that dendritic calcium activity is systematically
coincident with global events spreading throughout the entire neuron. Neither locomotion
nor visual stimulation altered this high coupling between somatic and dendritic activity.
However, the results showed that activity levels between soma and the apical tuft were
asymmetric. While almost all dendritic events were detected in the soma, up to 40% of
somatic events could not be detected in the apical tuft dendrites, suggesting that somatic
signals attenuated from the soma to the apical tuft. Throughout all compartments, smaller
events were more likely to decay below the detection threshold, suggesting that signals
attenuated in a distance and amplitude-dependent manner from the soma to the apical tuft.
These results provide important insights about the mechanisms of dendritic integration of
individual layer 5 neurons in the visual cortex. They suggest that the entire neuron behaves
as a single computational unit rather than many independent ones and suggest that activity
in the compartments is largely driven by somatic action potentials regardless of the animal’s
behavioural state. Nonetheless, the extent to which these findings apply to other neuronal
types, other cortical areas and different behavioural and perceptual states will have to be
determined by future experiments.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/36879
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/180
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Francioni, V., Padamsey, Z. and Rochefort, N. L. (2019) ‘High and asymmetric somatodendritic coupling of v1 layer 5 neurons independent of visual stimulation and locomotion’, eLife. doi: 10.7554/eLife.49145.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Pakan, J. M., Francioni, V. and Rochefort, N. L. (2018) ‘Action and learning shape the activity of neuronal circuits in the visual cortex’, Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 52, pp. 88–97. doi: 10.1016/j.conb.2018.04.020.
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dc.subject
dendrites
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dc.subject
GCaMP6
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dc.subject
layer 5
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dc.subject
visual cortex
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dc.subject
dendritic integration
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dc.title
Somato-dendritic coupling in layer 5 pyramidal neurons of the mouse primary visual cortex
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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