Developmental stage-specific spontaneous activity contributes to callosal axon projections

Author:

Tezuka Yuta1,Hagihara Kenta M2ORCID,Ohki Kenichi23456,Hirano Tomoo1ORCID,Tagawa Yoshiaki167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biophysics, Kyoto University Graduate School of Science

2. Department of Molecular Physiology, Kyushu University Graduate School of Medical Sciences

3. Department of Physiology, The University of Tokyo School of Medicine

4. International Research Center for Neurointelligence (WPI-IRCN), The University of Tokyo School of Medicine

5. Institute for AI and Beyond, The University of Tokyo School of Medicine

6. CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency

7. Department of Physiology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Kagoshima University

Abstract

The developing neocortex exhibits spontaneous network activity with various synchrony levels, which has been implicated in the formation of cortical circuits. We previously reported that the development of callosal axon projections, one of the major long-range axonal projections in the brain, is activity dependent. However, what sort of activity and when activity is indispensable are not known. Here, using a genetic method to manipulate network activity in a stage-specific manner, we demonstrated that network activity contributes to callosal axon projections in the mouse visual cortex during a ‘critical period’: restoring neuronal activity during that period resumed the projections, whereas restoration after the period failed. Furthermore, in vivo Ca2+ imaging revealed that the projections could be established even without fully restoring highly synchronous activity. Overall, our findings suggest that spontaneous network activity is selectively required during a critical developmental time window for the formation of long-range axonal projections in the cortex.

Funder

Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Institute for AI and Beyond

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Neural Diversity and Neocortical Organization

Dynamic Regulation of Brain Function by Scrap & Build System

Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders

The Kodama Memorial Fund for Medical Research

NOVARTIS Foundation (Japan) for the Promotion of Science

Uehara Memorial Foundation

Takeda Science Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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