SummaryInferior olive neurons regulate plasticity and timing in the cerebellar cortex via the climbing fiber pathway, but direct characterization of the output of this nucleus has remained elusive. We show that single somatic action potentials in olivary neurons are translated into a burst of axonal spikes. The number of spikes in the burst depends on the phase of subthreshold oscillations and, therefore, encodes the state of the olivary network. These bursts can be successfully transmitted to the cerebellar cortex in vivo, having a significant impact on Purkinje cells. They enhance dendritic spikes, modulate the complex spike pattern, and promote short-term and long-term plasticity at parallel fiber synapses in a manner dependent on the number of spikes in the burst. Our results challenge the view that the climbing fiber conveys an all-or-none signal to the cerebellar cortex and help to link learning and timing theories of olivocerebellar function.
SummaryMany GABAergic interneurons are electrically coupled and in vitro can display correlated activity with millisecond precision. However, the mechanisms underlying correlated activity between interneurons in vivo are unknown. Using dual patch-clamp recordings in vivo, we reveal that in the presence of spontaneous background synaptic activity, electrically coupled cerebellar Golgi cells exhibit robust millisecond precision-correlated activity which is enhanced by sensory stimulation. This precisely correlated activity results from the cooperative action of two mechanisms. First, electrical coupling ensures slow subthreshold membrane potential correlations by equalizing membrane potential fluctuations, such that coupled neurons tend to approach action potential threshold together. Second, fast spike-triggered spikelets transmitted through gap junctions conditionally trigger postjunctional spikes, depending on both neurons being close to threshold. Electrical coupling therefore controls the temporal precision and degree of both spontaneous and sensory-evoked correlated activity between interneurons, by the cooperative effects of shared synaptic depolarization and spikelet transmission.
Recent evidence that 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT or serotonin) enhances the release and the gene expression of vasopressin and oxytocin in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) suggests that 5-HT can excite the PVN magnocellular neurons. The objective of this study was to examine the underlying mechanisms for such excitatory action in the electrophysiologically identified hypothalamic PVN magnocellular neurons in rats using whole-cell patch-clamp. We found that 5-HT weakly depolarizes 33.3% of PVN magnocellular neurons in the presence of tetrodotoxin. A minuscule inward current was produced by 5-HT in 48% of the cells, which was attenuated when the 5-HT(4) antagonist GR113808 or the 5-HT(7) antagonist SB269970 was added. In addition, 5-HT reduced the frequency of miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents in a dose-dependent manner. This inhibition was mimicked by the 5-HT(1B) agonist CP93129, and reversed in the presence of 5-HT(1B) antagonists cyanopindolol and SB224289. Besides, 5-HT induced a biphasic effect on the frequency of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents, comprising a transient inhibition and a delayed concentration-dependent excitation (onset latency approximately 5 min). The facilitation was mimicked by the 5-HT(2A/2C) agonist DOI and abolished in the presence of the 5-HT(2C) antagonist RS102221. Our findings reveal that 5-HT directly increases the excitability of the PVN magnocellular neurons via multiple receptor subtypes and mechanisms. This may help understanding the regulation of 5-HT-induced hormone release and feeding behavior in the PVN.
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