AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the intrinsic electrical properties of neurons in the silkmoth antennal lobe (AL), specifically focusing on second-order projection neurons (PNs) and two types of local interneurons (LNs).
  • One type of LN demonstrates spiking activity linked to voltage-gated sodium channels, while the other type is nonspiking and lacks these channels, suggesting different physiological roles.
  • The research reveals that spiking LNs influence PNs through depolarization, while nonspiking LNs induce hyperpolarization in PNs, indicating distinct connectivity and functional roles in processing odor information.

Article Abstract

Neurons in the silkmoth antennal lobe (AL) are well characterized in terms of their morphology and odor-evoked firing activity. However, their intrinsic electrical properties including voltage-gated ionic currents and synaptic connectivity remain unclear. To address this, whole cell current- and voltage-clamp recordings were made from second-order projection neurons (PNs) and two morphological types of local interneurons (LNs) in the silkmoth AL. The two morphological types of LNs exhibited distinct physiological properties. One morphological type of LN showed a spiking response with a voltage-gated sodium channel gene expression, whereas the other type of LN was nonspiking without a voltage-gated sodium channel gene expression. Voltage-clamp experiments also revealed that both of two types of LNs as well as PNs possessed two types of voltage-gated potassium channels and calcium channels. In dual whole cell recordings of spiking LNs and PNs, activation of the PN elicited depolarization responses in the paired spiking LN, whereas activation of the spiking LN induced no substantial responses in the paired PN. However, simultaneous recording of a nonspiking LN and a PN showed that activation of the nonspiking LN induced hyperpolarization responses in the PN. We also observed bidirectional synaptic transmission via both chemical and electrical coupling in the pairs of spiking LNs. Thus our results indicate that there were two distinct types of LNs in the silkmoth AL, and their functional connectivity to PNs was substantially different. We propose distinct functional roles for these two different types of LNs in shaping odor-evoked firing activity in PNs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4737418PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00050.2015DOI Listing

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