Arousal and Locomotion Differently Modulate Activity of Somatostatin Neurons across Cortex

Author:

Khoury Christine F.ORCID,Fala Noelle G.,Runyan Caroline A.

Abstract

AbstractArousal powerfully influences cortical activity, in part by modulating local inhibitory circuits. Somatostatin (SOM)-expressing inhibitory interneurons are particularly well situated to shape local population activity in response to shifts in arousal, yet the relationship between arousal state and SOM activity has not been characterized outside of sensory cortex. To determine whether SOM activity is similarly modulated by behavioral state across different levels of the cortical processing hierarchy, we compared the behavioral modulation of SOM-expressing neurons in auditory cortex (AC), a primary sensory region, and posterior parietal cortex (PPC), an association-level region of cortex, in mice. Behavioral state modulated activity differently in AC and PPC. In PPC, transitions to high arousal were accompanied by large increases in activity across the full PPC neural population, especially in SOM neurons. In AC, arousal transitions led to more subtle changes in overall activity, as individual SOM and Non-SOM neurons could be either positively or negatively modulated during transitions to high arousal states. The coding of sensory information in population activity was enhanced during periods of high arousal in AC, but not in PPC. Our findings suggest unique relationships between activity in local circuits and arousal across cortex, which may be tailored to the roles of specific cortical regions in sensory processing or the control of behavior.

Funder

NIMH

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Pew Charitable Trusts

Searle Scholars Program

Klingenstein-Simons Fellowship

Andrew W Mellon Predoctoral Fellowship Program

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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