Acetylcholine Modulates Cerebellar Granule Cell Spiking by Regulating the Balance of Synaptic Excitation and Inhibition.
Abstract
Sensorimotor integration in the cerebellum is essential for refining motor output,
and the first stage of this processing occurs in the granule cell layer. Recent evidence
suggests that granule cell layer synaptic integration can be contextually modified,
although the circuit mechanisms that could mediate such modulation remain largely
unknown. Here we investigate the role of ACh in regulating granule cell layer synaptic
integration in male rats and mice of both sexes. We find that Golgi cells, interneurons
that provide the sole source of inhibition to the granule cell layer, express both
nicotinic and muscarinic cholinergic receptors. While acute ACh application can modestly
depolarize some Golgi cells, the net effect of longer, optogenetically induced ACh
release is to strongly hyperpolarize Golgi cells. Golgi cell hyperpolarization by
ACh leads to a significant reduction in both tonic and evoked granule cell synaptic
inhibition. ACh also reduces glutamate release from mossy fibers by acting on presynaptic
muscarinic receptors. Surprisingly, despite these consistent effects on Golgi cells
and mossy fibers, ACh can either increase or decrease the spike probability of granule
cells as measured by noninvasive cell-attached recordings. By constructing an integrate-and-fire
model of granule cell layer population activity, we find that the direction of spike
rate modulation can be accounted for predominately by the initial balance of excitation
and inhibition onto individual granule cells. Together, these experiments demonstrate
that ACh can modulate population-level granule cell responses by altering the ratios
of excitation and inhibition at the first stage of cerebellar processing.SIGNIFICANCE
STATEMENT The cerebellum plays a key role in motor control and motor learning. While
it is known that behavioral context can modify motor learning, the circuit basis of
such modulation has remained unclear. Here we find that a key neuromodulator, ACh,
can alter the balance of excitation and inhibition at the first stage of cerebellar
processing. These results suggest that ACh could play a key role in altering cerebellar
learning by modifying how sensorimotor input is represented at the input layer of
the cerebellum.
Type
Journal articleSubject
CerebellumNeurons
Animals
Mice
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Acetylcholine
Synaptic Transmission
Neural Inhibition
Models, Neurological
Female
Male
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23345Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1523/jneurosci.2148-19.2020Publication Info
Fore, Taylor R; Taylor, Benjamin N; Brunel, Nicolas; & Hull, Court (2020). Acetylcholine Modulates Cerebellar Granule Cell Spiking by Regulating the Balance
of Synaptic Excitation and Inhibition. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 40(14). pp. 2882-2894. 10.1523/jneurosci.2148-19.2020. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23345.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Nicolas Brunel
Duke School of Medicine Distinguished Professor in Neuroscience
We use theoretical models of brain systems to investigate how they process and learn
information from their inputs. Our current work focuses on the mechanisms of learning
and memory, from the synapse to the network level, in collaboration with various experimental
groups. Using methods fromstatistical physics, we have shown recently that the synapticconnectivity
of a network that maximizes storage capacity reproducestwo key experimentally observed
features: low connection proba
Court Alan Hull
Associate Professor of Neurobiology
We study neural circuits in the rodent cerebellum involved with motor timing, coordination,
and learning. Our approaches include high-speed multiphoton imaging from cerebellar
neurons in vivo during behavior, extracellular and intracellular electrophysiology
in vivo as well as in acute brain slices, and anatomical techniques such as cell type-specific
viral labeling to identify functional circuit pathways that connect the cerebellum
with other brain regions.
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