Modulation of Large Rhythmic Depolarizations in Human Large Basket Cells by Norepinephrine and Acetylcholine

Author:

Feldmeyer Dirk1ORCID,Yang Danqing2,Qi Guanxiao,Ort Jonas3,Witzig Victoria3ORCID,Bak Aniella3ORCID,Delev Daniel4,Koch Henner3

Affiliation:

1. Research Centre Jülich

2. Research Center Juelich, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, INM-10

3. RWTH Aachen University Hospital

4. Department of Neurosurgery, RWTH University of Aachen, Aachen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract

Rhythmic brain activity is critical to many brain functions and is sensitive to neuromodulation, but so far very few studies have investigated this activity on the cellular level in vitro in human brain tissue samples. This study reveals and characterizes a novel rhythmic network activity in the human neocortex. Using intracellular patch-clamp recordings of human cortical neurons, we identify large rhythmic depolarizations (LRDs) driven by glutamate release but not by GABA. These LRDs are intricate events made up of multiple depolarizing phases, occurring at ~ 0.3 Hz, have large amplitudes and long decay times. Unlike human tissue, rat neocortex layers 2/3 exhibit no such activity under identical conditions. LRDs are mainly observed in a subset of L2/3 interneurons that receive substantial excitatory inputs and are likely large basket cells based on their morphology. LRDs are highly sensitive to norepinephrine (NE) and acetylcholine (ACh), two neuromodulators that affect network dynamics. NE increases LRD frequency through β-adrenergic receptor activity while ACh decreases it via M4 muscarinic receptor activation. Multi-electrode array recordings show that NE enhances and synchronizes oscillatory network activity, whereas ACh causes desynchronization. Thus, NE and ACh distinctly modulate LRDs, exerting specific control over human neocortical activity.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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