Bursting mitral cells time the oscillatory coupling between olfactory bulb and entorhinal networks in neonatal mice.
Johanna K KostkaSabine GretenkordMarc SpehrIleana L Hanganu-OpatzPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2020)
During early postnatal development, mitral cells show either irregular bursting or non-bursting firing patterns Bursting mitral cells preferentially fire during theta bursts in the neonatal olfactory bulb, being locked to the theta phase Bursting mitral cells preferentially fire during theta bursts in the neonatal lateral entorhinal cortex and are temporally related to both respiration rhythm- and theta phase Bursting mitral cells act as a cellular substrate of the olfactory drive that promotes the oscillatory entrainment of entorhinal networks ABSTRACT: Shortly after birth, the olfactory system provides not only the main source of environmental inputs to blind, deaf, non-whisking and motorically-limited rodents, but also the drive boosting the functional entrainment of limbic circuits. However, the cellular substrate of this early communication remains largely unknown. Here, we combine in vivo and in vitro patch-clamp and extracellular recordings to reveal the contribution of mitral cell (MC) firing to early patterns of network activity in both the neonatal olfactory bulb (OB) and the lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC), the gatekeeper of limbic circuits. We show that MCs predominantly fire either in an irregular bursting or non-bursting pattern during discontinuous theta events in the OB. However, the temporal spike-theta phase coupling is stronger for bursting than non-bursting MCs. In line with the direct OB-to-LEC projections, both bursting and non-bursting discharge augments during co-ordinated patterns of entorhinal activity, albeit with higher magnitude for bursting MCs. For these neurons, temporal coupling to the discontinuous theta events in the LEC is stronger. Thus, bursting MCs might drive the entrainment of the OB-LEC network during neonatal development.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- mitral valve
- working memory
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- cell cycle arrest
- left ventricular
- left atrial
- high frequency
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- blood pressure
- preterm infants
- adipose tissue
- prefrontal cortex
- heart failure
- type diabetes
- room temperature
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- cell therapy
- pi k akt
- risk assessment
- insulin resistance
- minimally invasive
- pregnant women
- bone marrow
- functional connectivity
- ejection fraction
- catheter ablation
- gestational age
- ionic liquid