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Impact of intrinsic properties and synaptic factors on the activity of neocortical networks in vivo.
Authors:I Timofeev  F Grenier  M Steriade
Affiliation:Laboratory of Neurophysiology, Department of Anatomy and Physiology, School of Medicine, Laval University, PQ G1K 7P4, Québec, Canada. igor.timofeev@phs.ulaval.ca
Abstract:To investigate the relative impact of intrinsic and synaptic factors in the maintenance of the membrane potential of cat neocortical neurons in various states of the network, we performed intracellular recordings in vivo. Experiments were done in the intact cortex and in isolated neocortical slabs of anesthetized animals, and in naturally sleeping and awake cats. There are at least four different electrophysiological cell classes in the neocortex. The responses of different neuronal classes to direct depolarization result in significantly different responses in postsynaptic cells. The activity patterns observed in the intact cortex of anesthetized cats depended mostly on the type of anesthesia. The intracellular activity in small neocortical slabs was composed of silent periods, lasting for tens of seconds, during which only small depolarizing potentials (SDPs, presumed miniature synaptic potentials) were present, and relatively short-lasting (a few hundred milliseconds) active periods. Our data suggest that minis might be amplified by intrinsically-bursting neurons and that the persistent Na+ current brings neurons to firing threshold, thus triggering active periods. The active periods in neurons were composed of the summation of synaptic events and intrinsic depolarizing currents. In chronically-implanted cats, slow-wave sleep was characterized by active (depolarizing) and silent (hyperpolarizing) periods. The silent periods were absent in awake cats. We propose that both intrinsic and synaptic factors are responsible for the transition from silent to active states found in naturally sleeping cats and that synaptic depression might be responsible for the termination of active states during sleep. In view of the unexpected high firing rates of neocortical neurons during the depolarizing epochs in slow-wave sleep, we suggest that cortical neurons are implicated in short-term plasticity processes during this state, in which the brain is disconnected from the outside world, and that memory traces acquired during wakefulness may be consolidated during sleep.
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