Abstract

Ketamine is a common anaesthetic agent used in research and more recently as medication in treatment of depression. It has known effects on inhibition of interneurons and cortical stimulus-locked responses, but the underlying functional network mechanisms are still elusive. Analysing population activity across all layers within the auditory cortex, we found that doses of this anaesthetic induce a stronger activation and stimulus-locked response to pure-tone stimuli. This cortical response is driven by gain enhancement of thalamocortical input processing selectively within granular layers due to an increased recurrent excitation. Time-frequency analysis indicates a higher broadband magnitude response and prolonged phase coherence in granular layers, possibly pointing to disinhibition of this recurrent excitation. These results further the understanding of ketamine's functional mechanisms, which will improve the ability to interpret physiological studies moving from anaesthetized to awake paradigms and may lead to the development of better ketamine-based depression treatments with lower side effects. Ketamine is commonly used as an anaesthetic agent and has more recently gained attention as an antidepressant. It has been linked to increased stimulus-locked excitability, inhibition of interneurons and modulation of intrinsic neuronal oscillations. However, the functional network mechanisms are still elusive. A better understanding of these anaesthetic network effects may improve upon previous interpretations of seminal studies conducted under anaesthesia and have widespread relevance for neuroscience with awake and anaesthetized subjects as well as in medicine. Here, we investigated the effects of anaesthetic doses of ketamine (15mgkg-1 h-1 i.p.) on the network activity after pure-tone stimulation within the auditory cortex of male Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus). We used laminar current source density (CSD) analysis and subsequent layer-specific continuous wavelet analysis to investigate spatiotemporal response dynamics on cortical columnar processing in awake and ketamine-anaesthetized animals. We found thalamocortical input processing within granular layers III/IV to be significantly increased under ketamine. This layer-dependent gain enhancement under ketamine was not due to changes in cross-trial phase coherence but was rather attributed to a broadband increase in magnitude reflecting an increase in recurrent excitation. A time-frequency analysis was indicative of a prolonged period of stimulus-induced excitation possibly due to a reduced coupling of excitation and inhibition in granular input circuits - in line with the common hypothesis of cortical disinhibition via suppression of GABAergic interneurons.

Highlights

  • In research of cortical function, the use of general anesthesia aims to prevent acute pain and reduce signal noise, while still leaving the sensory information pathway to the neocortex as intact as possible

  • Altered spatiotemporal profile in the auditory cortex induced by ketamine anesthesia We compared the tone-evoked laminar currentsource density (CSD) profiles in the primary auditory cortex of Mongolian gerbils under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia, with cortical silencing by topical application of muscimol, and while awake (Figure 1)

  • We investigated the effects of anesthetic doses of ketamine (15mg kg-1/h) on synaptic population dynamics in the auditory cortex of Mongolian gerbils using layerspecific CSD analysis

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Summary

Introduction

In research of cortical function, the use of general anesthesia aims to prevent acute pain and reduce signal noise, while still leaving the sensory information pathway to the neocortex as intact as possible. The layer-dependent gain enhancement of the dominant sensory response early after tone presentation was mainly attributed to a broadband increase in al., 2016; Zhang et al, 2019) and disinhibition of the amplitude reflecting an increase in recurrent excitation

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