Opening Holes in the Blanket of Inhibition: Localized Lateral Disinhibition by VIP Interneurons.
Mahesh Miikael KarnaniJesse JacksonInbal AyzenshtatAzadeh Hamzehei SichaniKasra ManoocheriSamuel KimRafael YustePublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Most inhibitory interneurons have axons restricted to a nearby area and target excitatory neighbors indiscriminately, raising the issue of how neuronal activity can propagate through cortical circuits. Vasoactive intestinal peptide-expressing interneurons (VIPs) disinhibit cortical pyramidal cells through inhibition of other inhibitory interneurons, and they have very focused, "narrow" axons. By optogenetically activating single VIPs in live mice while recording the activity of nearby neurons, we find that VIPs break open a hole in blanket inhibition with an effective range of ∼120 μm in lateral cortical space where excitatory activity can propagate.