Whisker row deprivation affects the flow of sensory information through rat barrel cortex

J Neurophysiol. 2017 Jan 1;117(1):4-17. doi: 10.1152/jn.00289.2016. Epub 2016 Oct 5.

Abstract

Whisker trimming causes substantial reorganization of neuronal response properties in barrel cortex. However, little is known about experience-dependent rerouting of sensory processing following sensory deprivation. To address this, we performed in vivo intracellular recordings from layers 2/3 (L2/3), layer 4 (L4), layer 5 regular-spiking (L5RS), and L5 intrinsically bursting (L5IB) neurons and measured their multiwhisker receptive field at the level of spiking activity, membrane potential, and synaptic conductance before and after sensory deprivation. We used Chernoff information to quantify the "sensory information" contained in the firing patterns of cells in response to spared and deprived whisker stimulation. In the control condition, information for flanking-row and same-row whiskers decreased in the order L4, L2/3, L5IB, L5RS. However, after whisker-row deprivation, spared flanking-row whisker information was reordered to L4, L5RS, L5IB, L2/3. Sensory information from the trimmed whiskers was reduced and delayed in L2/3 and L5IB neurons, whereas sensory information from spared whiskers was increased and advanced in L4 and L5RS neurons. Sensory information from spared whiskers was increased in L5IB neurons without a latency change. L5RS cells exhibited the largest changes in sensory information content through an atypical plasticity combining a significant decrease in spontaneous activity and an increase in a short-latency excitatory conductance.

New & noteworthy: Sensory cortical plasticity is usually quantified by changes in evoked firing rate. In this study we quantified plasticity by changes in sensory detection performance using Chernoff information and receiver operating characteristic analysis. We found that whisker deprivation causes a change in information flow within the cortical layers and that layer 5 regular-spiking cells, despite showing only a small potentiation of short-latency input, show the greatest increase in information content for the spared input partly by decreasing their spontaneous activity.

Keywords: conductance; cortical circuit; cortical column; plasticity; vibrissa.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Action Potentials / physiology
  • Afferent Pathways / physiology*
  • Animals
  • Biophysics
  • Electric Stimulation
  • Lysine / analogs & derivatives
  • Lysine / metabolism
  • Male
  • Neurons / physiology*
  • Patch-Clamp Techniques
  • Physical Stimulation
  • ROC Curve
  • Rats
  • Rats, Long-Evans
  • Reaction Time / physiology
  • Sensory Deprivation
  • Somatosensory Cortex / cytology
  • Somatosensory Cortex / physiology*
  • Vibrissae / innervation*

Substances

  • biocytin
  • Lysine