Author:
RAMCHARAN EION J.,GNADT JAMES W.,SHERMAN S. MURRAY
Abstract
Thalamic relay cells fire in two distinct modes,
burst or tonic, and the operative mode is dictated by the
inactivation state of low-threshold, voltage-gated, transient
(or T-type) Ca2+ channels. Tonic firing is seen
when the T channels are inactivated via membrane
depolarization, and burst firing is seen when the T channels
are activated from a hyperpolarized state. These response
modes have very different effects on the relay of information
to the cortex. It had been thought that only tonic firing
is seen in the awake, alert animal, but recent evidence
from several species suggests that bursting may also occur.
We have begun to explore this issue in macaque monkeys
by recording from thalamic relay cells of unanesthetized,
behaving animals. In the lateral geniculate nucleus, the
thalamic relay for retinal information, we found that tonic
mode dominated responses both during alert behavior as
well as during sleep. We nonetheless found burst firing
present during the vigilant, waking state. There was, however,
considerably more burst mode firing during sleep than wakefulness.
Surprisingly, we did not find the bursting during sleep
to be rhythmic. We also recorded from relay cells of the
somatosensory thalamus. Interestingly, not only did these
somatosensory neurons exhibit much more burst mode activity
than did geniculate cells, but bursting during sleep was
highly rhythmic. It thus appears that the level and nature
of relay cell bursting may not be constant across all thalamic
nuclei.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
169 articles.
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