Cell Assembly Signatures Defined by Short-Term Synaptic Plasticity in Cortical Networks

Author:

Carrillo-Reid Luis1,Lopez-Huerta Violeta G.2,Garcia-Munoz Marianela2,Theiss Stephan3,Arbuthnott Gordon W.2

Affiliation:

1. Columbia University, Department of Biological Sciences, New York, USA

2. Brain Mechanisms for Behavior Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, 904-0495 Okinawa, Japan

3. Heinrich Heine University, Dusseldorf, Germany

Abstract

The cell assembly (CA) hypothesis has been used as a conceptual framework to explain how groups of neurons form memories. CAs are defined as neuronal pools with synchronous, recurrent and sequential activity patterns. However, neuronal interactions and synaptic properties that define CAs signatures have been difficult to examine because identities and locations of assembly members are usually unknown. In order to study synaptic properties that define CAs, we used optical and electrophysiological approaches to record activity of identified neurons in mouse cortical cultures. Population analysis and graph theory techniques allowed us to find sequential patterns that represent repetitive transitions between network states. Whole cell pair recordings of neurons participating in repeated sequences demonstrated that synchrony is exhibited by groups of neurons with strong synaptic connectivity (concomitant firing) showing short-term synaptic depression (STD), whereas alternation (sequential firing) is seen in groups of neurons with weaker synaptic connections showing short-term synaptic facilitation (STF). Decreasing synaptic weights of a network promoted the generation of sequential activity patterns, whereas increasing synaptic weights restricted state transitions. Thus in simple cortical networks of real neurons, basic signatures of CAs, the properties that underlie perception and memory in Hebb's original description, are already present.

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,General Medicine

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