期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
Lateral and feedforward inhibition suppress asynchronous activity in a large, biophysically-detailed computational model of the striatal network
Jason T. Moyer1  Leif H. Finkel1  John A. Wolf1  Benjamin L. Halterman1 
[1] University of Pennsylvania;
关键词: Basal Ganglia;    Parkinson Disease;    Tourette Syndrome;    computational model;    inhibition;    Striatum;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fncom.2014.00152
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) receive lateral inhibitory projections from other MSNs and feedforward inhibitory projections from fast-spiking, parvalbumin-containing striatal interneurons (FSIs).The functional roles of these connections are unknown, and difficult to study in an experimental preparation.We therefore investigated the functionality of both lateral (MSN-MSN) and feedforward (FSI-MSN) inhibition using a large-scale computational model of the striatal network.The model consists of 2744 MSNs comprised of 189 compartments each and 121 FSIs comprised of 148 compartments each, with dendrites explicitly represented and almost all known ionic currents included and strictly constrained by biological data as appropriate.Our analysis of the model indicates that both lateral inhibition and feedforward inhibition function at the population level to limit non-ensemble MSN spiking while preserving ensemble MSN spiking.Specifically, lateral inhibition enables large ensembles of MSNs firing synchronously to strongly suppress non-ensemble MSNs over a short time-scale (10-30 msec).Feedforward inhibition enables FSIs to strongly inhibit weakly activated, non-ensemble MSNs while moderately inhibiting activated ensemble MSNs.Importantly, FSIs appear to more effectively inhibit MSNs when FSIs fire asynchronously.Both types of inhibition would increase the signal-to-noise ratio of responding MSN ensembles and contribute to the formation and dissolution of MSN ensembles in the striatal network.

【 授权许可】

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