Distal activity patterns shape the spatial specificity of neurovascular coupling.

Nat Neurosci

Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Brain and Learning (CIRCA), Université de Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.

Published: November 2024

Neurovascular coupling links brain activity to local changes in blood flow, forming the basis for non-invasive brain mapping. Using multiscale imaging, we investigated how vascular activity spatially relates to neuronal activity elicited by single whiskers across different columns and layers of mouse cortex. Here we show that mesoscopic hemodynamic signals quantitatively reflect neuronal activity across space but are composed of a highly heterogeneous pattern of responses across individual vessel segments that is poorly predicted by local neuronal activity. Rather, this heterogeneity is dependent on vessel directionality, specifically in thalamocortical input layer 4, where capillaries respond preferentially to neuronal activity patterns along their downstream perfusion domain. Thus, capillaries fine-tune blood flow based on distant activity and encode laminar-specific activity patterns. These findings imply that vascular anatomy sets a resolution limit on functional imaging signals, where individual blood vessels inaccurately report neuronal activity in their immediate vicinity but, instead, integrate activity patterns along the vascular arbor.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41593-024-01756-7DOI Listing

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