Abstract

The olfactory bulb transforms not only the information content of the primary sensory representation, but also its underlying coding metric. High-variance, slow-timescale primary odor representations are transformed by bulbar circuitry into secondary representations based on principal neuron spike patterns that are tightly regulated in time. This emergent fast timescale for signaling is reflected in gamma-band local field potentials, presumably serving to efficiently integrate olfactory sensory information into the temporally regulated information networks of the central nervous system. To understand this transformation and its integration with interareal coordination mechanisms requires that we understand its fundamental dynamical principles. Using a biophysically explicit, multiscale model of olfactory bulb circuitry, we here demonstrate that an inhibition-coupled intrinsic oscillator framework, pyramidal resonance interneuron network gamma (PRING), best captures the diversity of physiological properties exhibited by the olfactory bulb. Most importantly, these properties include global zero-phase synchronization in the gamma band, the phase-restriction of informative spikes in principal neurons with respect to this common clock, and the robustness of this synchronous oscillatory regime to multiple challenging conditions observed in the biological system. These conditions include substantial heterogeneities in afferent activation levels and excitatory synaptic weights, high levels of uncorrelated background activity among principal neurons, and spike frequencies in both principal neurons and interneurons that are irregular in time and much lower than the gamma frequency. This coupled cellular oscillator architecture permits stable and replicable ensemble responses to diverse sensory stimuli under various external conditions as well as to changes in network parameters arising from learning-dependent synaptic plasticity.

Highlights

  • The mammalian main olfactory bulb (OB) plays a central role in processing and relaying olfactory information from the primary sensory epithelium to subcortical and cortical areas [1]

  • Such oscillations are indications that a substantial number of principal neurons in the olfactory bulb are coordinating their activities in time, which often means that their action potentials are synchronized, or partly synchronized, such that the pattern of small differences in their spike times contains olfactory sensory

  • We show that these dynamics arise from an inhibition-coupled oscillator framework, a type of dynamical system with some established mathematical properties

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Summary

Introduction

The mammalian main olfactory bulb (OB) plays a central role in processing and relaying olfactory information from the primary sensory epithelium to subcortical and cortical areas [1]. (Pulsed inhibitory inputs, including shunting inhibition, have been demonstrated to effectively reset MC STOs [28, 37,38,39]) During these active epochs, the network dynamics exhibit key PING-like properties (e.g., the population oscillation frequency depends on the decay time constant of the GABA(A) receptor conductance), but they retain a dependence on the slower STO dynamics of mitral cells even when the STO frequency itself is superseded by the network oscillation. The network dynamics exhibit key PING-like properties (e.g., the population oscillation frequency depends on the decay time constant of the GABA(A) receptor conductance), but they retain a dependence on the slower STO dynamics of mitral cells even when the STO frequency itself is superseded by the network oscillation This dynamical mechanism, pyramidal resonance interneuron network gamma (PRING), is consistent with a broad range of experimental data and is modeled here

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