Cell-Type Specific Connectivity of Whisker-Related Sensory and Motor Cortical Input to Dorsal Striatum

Author:

Sanabria Branden D.ORCID,Baskar Sindhuja S.ORCID,Yonk Alex J.ORCID,Linares-Garcia IvánORCID,Abraira Victoria E.ORCID,Lee Christian R.ORCID,Margolis David J.ORCID

Abstract

The anterior dorsolateral striatum (DLS) is heavily innervated by convergent excitatory projections from the primary motor (M1) and sensory cortex (S1) and considered an important site of sensorimotor integration. M1 and S1 corticostriatal synapses have functional differences in their connection strength with striatal spiny projection neurons (SPNs) and fast-spiking interneurons (FSIs) in the DLS and, as a result, exert distinct influences on sensory-guided behaviors. In the present study, we tested whether M1 and S1 inputs exhibit differences in the subcellular anatomical distribution of striatal neurons. We injected adeno-associated viral vectors encoding spaghetti monster fluorescent proteins (sm.FPs) into M1 and S1 in male and female mice and used confocal microscopy to generate 3D reconstructions of corticostriatal inputs to single identified SPNs and FSIs obtained through ex vivo patch clamp electrophysiology. We found that M1 and S1 dually innervate SPNs and FSIs; however, there is a consistent bias towards the M1 input in SPNs that is not found in FSIs. In addition, M1 and S1 inputs were distributed similarly across the proximal, medial, and distal regions of SPN and FSI dendrites. Notably, closely localized M1 and S1 clusters of inputs were more prevalent in SPNs than FSIs, suggesting that cortical inputs are integrated through cell-type specific mechanisms. Our results suggest that the stronger functional connectivity from M1 to SPNs compared to S1, as previously observed, is due to a higher quantity of synaptic inputs. Our results have implications for how sensorimotor integration is performed in the striatum through cell-specific differences in corticostriatal connections.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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