Abstract

The most appealing models of how the basal ganglia function propose distributed patterns of cortical activity selectively interacting with striatal networks to yield the execution of context-dependent movements. If movement is encoded by patterns of activity then these may be disrupted by influences at once more subtle and more devastating than the increase or decrease of neuronal firing that dominate the usual models of the circuit. In the absence of dopamine the compositional capabilities of cell assemblies in the network could be disrupted by the generation of dominant synchronous activity that engages most of the system. Experimental evidence about Parkinson's disease suggests that dopamine loss produces abnormal patterns of activity in different nuclei. For example, increased oscillatory activity arises in the GPe, GPi, and STN and is reflected as increased cortical beta frequency coherence disrupting the ability to produce motor sequences. When the idea of deep brain stimulation was proposed – it was supported by the information that lesions of the subthalamus reversed the effects of damage to the dopamine input to the system. However, it seems increasingly unlikely that the stimulation acts by silencing the nucleus as was at first proposed. Perhaps the increased cortical beta activity caused by the lack of dopamine could have disabled the patterning of network activity. Stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus disrupts the on-going cortical rhythms. Subsequently asynchronous firing is reinstated and striatal cell assemblies and the whole basal ganglia circuit engage in a more normal pattern of activity. We will review the different variables involved in the generation of sequential activity patterns, integrate our data on deep brain stimulation and network population dynamics, and thus provide a novel interpretation of functional aspects of basal ganglia circuitry.

Highlights

  • Global changes in the activity of specific basal ganglia structures generate devastating pathologies (e.g., Parkinson’s disease; Huntington chorea)

  • We have looked at these in striatal neurons we expect similar properties to be present throughout the basal ganglia circuits

  • We have tried to introduce new concepts indicating that basal ganglia structures are capable of forming neuronal networks that can demonstrate compositional properties

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Summary

Introduction

Global changes in the activity of specific basal ganglia structures generate devastating pathologies (e.g., Parkinson’s disease; Huntington chorea). In order to store and perform complex behaviors, cell assemblies must have diverse capabilities, such as the ability to synchronize activity and to compose sequences among different neuronal microcircuits (Hebb, 1949; Carrillo-Reid et al, 2009a). Network dynamics that depend on plateau potentials have been observed in different structures of the basal ganglia (Vergara et al, 2003; Ibanez-Sandoval et al, 2007; Carrillo-Reid et al, 2008, 2009a,b).

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