| Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | |
| Fast-reset of pacemaking and theta-frequency resonance patterns in cerebellar golgi cells: Simulations of their impact in vivo | |
| Egidio D‘Angelo2  Lia Forti2  Elisabetta Cesana2  Jonathan Mapelli2  Erik De Schutter3  Sergio Solinas3  | |
| [1] Computational Neuroscience Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology;Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiological and Pharmacological Sciences, University of Pavia and CNISM;Theoretical Neurobiology, University of Antwerp; | |
| 关键词: Cerebellum; modeling; resonance; golgi cell; granular layer; phase-reset; | |
| DOI : 10.3389/neuro.03.004.2007 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
The Golgi cells are inhibitory interneurons of the cerebellar granular layer, which respond to afferent stimulation in vivo with a burst-pause sequence interrupting their irregular background low-frequency firing (Vos et al., 1999a. Eur. J. Neurosci. 11, 2621–2634). However, Golgi cells in vitro are regular pacemakers (Forti et al., 2006. J. Physiol. 574, 711–729), raising the question how their ionic mechanisms could impact on responses during physiological activity. Using patch-clamp recordings in cerebellar slices we show that the pacemaker cycle can be suddenly reset by spikes, making the cell highly sensitive to input variations. Moreover, the neuron resonates around the pacemaker frequency, making it specifically sensitive to patterned stimulation in the theta-frequency band. Computational analysis based on a model developed to reproduce Golgi cell pacemaking (Solinas et al., 2008 Front. Neurosci., 1:2) predicted that phase-reset required spike-triggered activation of SK channels and that resonance was sustained by a slow voltage-dependent potassium current and amplified by a persistent sodium current. Adding balanced synaptic noise to mimic the irregular discharge observed in vivo, we found that pacemaking converts into spontaneous irregular discharge, that phase-reset plays an important role in generating the burst-pause pattern evoked by sensory stimulation, and that repetitive stimulation at theta-frequency enhances the time-precision of spike coding in the burst. These results suggest that Golgi cell intrinsic properties exert a profound impact on time-dependent signal processing in the cerebellar granular layer.
【 授权许可】
Unknown