Abstract

The striatum is populated by a single projection neuron group, the medium spiny neurons (MSNs), and several groups of interneurons. Two of the electrophysiologically well-characterized striatal interneuron groups are the tonically active neurons (TANs), which are presumably cholinergic interneurons, and the fast spiking interneurons (FSIs), presumably parvalbumin (PV) expressing GABAergic interneurons. To better understand striatal processing it is thus crucial to define the functional relationship between MSNs and these interneurons in the awake and behaving animal. We used multiple electrodes and standard physiological methods to simultaneously record MSN spiking activity and the activity of TANs or FSIs from monkeys engaged in a classical conditioning paradigm. All three cell populations were highly responsive to the behavioral task. However, they displayed different average response profiles and a different degree of response synchronization (signal correlation). TANs displayed the most transient and synchronized response, MSNs the most diverse and sustained response and FSIs were in between on both parameters. We did not find evidence for direct monosynaptic connectivity between the MSNs and either the TANs or the FSIs. However, while the cross correlation histograms of TAN to MSN pairs were flat, those of FSI to MSN displayed positive asymmetrical broad peaks. The FSI-MSN correlogram profile implies that the spikes of MSNs follow those of FSIs and both are driven by a common, most likely cortical, input. Thus, the two populations of striatal interneurons are probably driven by different afferents and play complementary functional roles in the physiology of the striatal microcircuit.

Highlights

  • The striatum is the primary input stage of the basal ganglia network

  • STRIATAL CELL CLASSIFICATION AND IDENTIFICATION We recorded the activity of striatal neurons from two monkeys engaged in a well-practiced classical conditioning task (Figure 1A)

  • The flat CCHs of medium spiny projection neurons (MSNs)-tonically active cholinergic interneurons (TANs) pairs contrasted with the asymmetric broadly peaked CCHs of MSN-FSI pairs

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Summary

Introduction

Its medium spiny projection neurons (MSNs) constitute the vast majority of striatal cells (Tepper et al, 2008). Their activity and striatal output is thought to be highly affected by a proportionally small population of a-spiny interneurons (Kawaguchi et al, 1995; Kreitzer, 2009; Tepper et al, 2010; Gittis and Kreitzer, 2012). TANs probably cannot be characterized as having an excitatory or inhibitory effect on MSN activity; rather they are assumed to have a global modulatory effect (Oldenburg and Ding, 2011)

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