Neuron
Volume 109, Issue 13, 7 July 2021, Pages 2150-2164.e5
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Article
NDNF interneurons in layer 1 gain-modulate whole cortical columns according to an animal’s behavioral state

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2021.05.001Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Arousal strongly enhances the activity and sensory-evoked responses of L1 NDNF INs

  • L1 NDNF INs gain-modulate local EXC neurons selectively during high-arousal states

  • L1 NDNF INs inhibit the apical dendrites of EXC neurons and disinhibit their somata

  • Active NDNF INs are evenly spread across L1 and can affect EXC neurons in all layers

Summary

Processing of sensory information in neural circuits is modulated by an animal’s behavioral state, but the underlying cellular mechanisms are not well understood. Focusing on the mouse visual cortex, here we analyze the role of GABAergic interneurons that are located in layer 1 and express Ndnf (L1 NDNF INs) in the state-dependent control over sensory processing. We find that the ongoing and sensory-evoked activity of L1 NDNF INs is strongly enhanced when an animal is aroused and that L1 NDNF INs gain-modulate local excitatory neurons selectively during high-arousal states by inhibiting their apical dendrites while disinhibiting their somata via Parvalbumin-expressing interneurons. Because active NDNF INs are evenly spread in L1 and can affect excitatory neurons across all cortical layers, this indicates that the state-dependent activation of L1 NDNF INs and the subsequent shift of inhibition in excitatory neurons toward their apical dendrites gain-modulate sensory processing in whole cortical columns.

Keywords

cortex
layer 1
L1 NDNF interneurons
visual processing
brain state
top-down processing
gain modulation
stimulus selectivity
dendritic inhibition
somatic disinhibition

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