Behavioral state and stimulus strength regulate the role of somatostatin interneurons in stabilizing network activity.

dc.contributor.author

Cammarata, Celine M

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Pei, Yingming

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Shields, Brenda C

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Lim, Shaun SX

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Hawley, Tammy

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Li, Jennifer Y

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St Amand, David

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Brunel, Nicolas

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Tadross, Michael R

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Glickfeld, Lindsey L

dc.date.accessioned

2024-11-01T13:34:58Z

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2024-11-01T13:34:58Z

dc.date.issued

2024-09-10

dc.description.abstract

Inhibition stabilization enables cortical circuits to encode sensory signals across diverse contexts. Somatostatin-expressing (SST) interneurons are well-suited for this role through their strong recurrent connectivity with excitatory pyramidal cells. We developed a cortical circuit model predicting that SST cells become increasingly important for stabilization as sensory input strengthens. We tested this prediction in mouse primary visual cortex by manipulating excitatory input to SST cells, a key parameter for inhibition stabilization, with a novel cell-type specific pharmacological method to selectively block glutamatergic receptors on SST cells. Consistent with our model predictions, we find antagonizing glutamatergic receptors drives a paradoxical facilitation of SST cells with increasing stimulus contrast. In addition, we find even stronger engagement of SST-dependent stabilization when the mice are aroused. Thus, we reveal that the role of SST cells in cortical processing gradually switches as a function of both input strength and behavioral state.

dc.identifier

2024.09.09.612138

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2692-8205

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31614

dc.language

eng

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bioRxiv

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10.1101/2024.09.09.612138

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

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AMPA receptors

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calcium imaging

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chemogenetics

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inhibition

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microcircuit

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normalization

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pharmacology

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visual cortex

dc.title

Behavioral state and stimulus strength regulate the role of somatostatin interneurons in stabilizing network activity.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Brunel, Nicolas|0000-0002-2272-3248

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Basic Science Departments

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Neurobiology

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Center for Cognitive Neuroscience

pubs.publication-status

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