Gradients in the mammalian cerebellar cortex enable Fourier-like transformation and improve storing capacity

Author:

Straub Isabelle1ORCID,Witter Laurens12ORCID,Eshra Abdelmoneim1,Hoidis Miriam1,Byczkowicz Niklas1ORCID,Maas Sebastian1,Delvendahl Igor1ORCID,Dorgans Kevin3ORCID,Savier Elise3ORCID,Bechmann Ingo4,Krueger Martin4,Isope Philippe3,Hallermann Stefan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Carl-Ludwig-Institute for Physiology, Medical Faculty, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany

2. Department of Integrative Neurophysiology, Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research (CNCR), VU University, Amsterdam, Netherlands

3. Institut des Neurosciences Cellulaires et Intégratives, CNRS, Université de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France

4. Institute of Anatomy, Medical Faculty, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

Cerebellar granule cells (GCs) make up the majority of all neurons in the vertebrate brain, but heterogeneities among GCs and potential functional consequences are poorly understood. Here, we identified unexpected gradients in the biophysical properties of GCs in mice. GCs closer to the white matter (inner-zone GCs) had higher firing thresholds and could sustain firing with larger current inputs than GCs closer to the Purkinje cell layer (outer-zone GCs). Dynamic Clamp experiments showed that inner- and outer-zone GCs preferentially respond to high- and low-frequency mossy fiber inputs, respectively, enabling dispersion of the mossy fiber input into its frequency components as performed by a Fourier transformation. Furthermore, inner-zone GCs have faster axonal conduction velocity and elicit faster synaptic potentials in Purkinje cells. Neuronal network modeling revealed that these gradients improve spike-timing precision of Purkinje cells and decrease the number of GCs required to learn spike-sequences. Thus, our study uncovers biophysical gradients in the cerebellar cortex enabling a Fourier-like transformation of mossy fiber inputs.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

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

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