Abstract

Feedback inhibition is generally believed to be a ubiquitous feature of brain circuitry, but few specific instances have been documented. An example in cats is the supposed feedback circuit involving relay cells of the lateral geniculate nucleus and cells of the perigeniculate nucleus (a part of the thalamic reticular nucleus): geniculate relay cells innervate the perigeniculate nucleus, which, in turn, provides an inhibitory, GABAergic projection back to the lateral geniculate nucleus. However, feedback inhibition at the single-cell level requires that a given perigeniculate cell project back onto the same geniculate relay cell that innervates it. We probed for this in an in vitro slice preparation of the cat's lateral geniculate nucleus. We evoked a single action potential in a geniculate cell via a brief, depolarizing pulse delivered through an intracellular recording electrode and looked for any evoked hyperpolarizations. For 6 of the 36 geniculate cells tested, we observed a long-lasting hyperpolarization after the action potential, and much of this was eliminated by application of bicuculline, suggesting synaptically activated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials. We interpreted this to be clear evidence that a given neuron may inhibit itself via circuitry mediating feedback inhibition in the cat's lateral geniculate nucleus.

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