Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons

Acetylcholine is a neuromodulator that shapes information processing in different cortical and subcortical areas. Cell type and location specific cholinergic receptor distributions suggest that acetylcholine in macaque striate cortex should boost feed-forward driven activity, while also reducing pop...

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Main Authors: Jose L. Herrero, Marc A. Gieselmann, Alexander Thiele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Neural Circuits
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fncir.2017.00106/full
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spelling doaj-59c370b8639e4707894e4a83e2b34a732020-11-25T00:12:19ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neural Circuits1662-51102017-12-011110.3389/fncir.2017.00106299857Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 NeuronsJose L. HerreroMarc A. GieselmannAlexander ThieleAcetylcholine is a neuromodulator that shapes information processing in different cortical and subcortical areas. Cell type and location specific cholinergic receptor distributions suggest that acetylcholine in macaque striate cortex should boost feed-forward driven activity, while also reducing population excitability by increasing inhibitory tone. Studies using cholinergic agonists in anesthetized primate V1 have yielded conflicting evidence for such a proposal. Here we investigated how muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade affect neuronal excitability and contrast response functions in awake macaque area V1. Muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade caused reduced activity for all contrasts tested, without affecting the contrast where neurons reach their half maximal response (c50). The activity reduction upon muscarinic and nicotinic blockade resulted in reduced neuronal contrast sensitivity, as assessed through neurometric functions. In the majority of cells receptor blockade was best described by a response gain model (a multiplicative scaling of responses), indicating that ACh is involved in signal enhancement, not saliency filtering in macaque V1.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fncir.2017.00106/fullacetylcholinevisual cortex organizationcontrast sensitivitynormalizationprimary visual cortex (V1)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jose L. Herrero
Marc A. Gieselmann
Alexander Thiele
spellingShingle Jose L. Herrero
Marc A. Gieselmann
Alexander Thiele
Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
Frontiers in Neural Circuits
acetylcholine
visual cortex organization
contrast sensitivity
normalization
primary visual cortex (V1)
author_facet Jose L. Herrero
Marc A. Gieselmann
Alexander Thiele
author_sort Jose L. Herrero
title Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
title_short Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
title_full Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
title_fullStr Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
title_full_unstemmed Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
title_sort muscarinic and nicotinic contribution to contrast sensitivity of macaque area v1 neurons
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neural Circuits
issn 1662-5110
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Acetylcholine is a neuromodulator that shapes information processing in different cortical and subcortical areas. Cell type and location specific cholinergic receptor distributions suggest that acetylcholine in macaque striate cortex should boost feed-forward driven activity, while also reducing population excitability by increasing inhibitory tone. Studies using cholinergic agonists in anesthetized primate V1 have yielded conflicting evidence for such a proposal. Here we investigated how muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade affect neuronal excitability and contrast response functions in awake macaque area V1. Muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade caused reduced activity for all contrasts tested, without affecting the contrast where neurons reach their half maximal response (c50). The activity reduction upon muscarinic and nicotinic blockade resulted in reduced neuronal contrast sensitivity, as assessed through neurometric functions. In the majority of cells receptor blockade was best described by a response gain model (a multiplicative scaling of responses), indicating that ACh is involved in signal enhancement, not saliency filtering in macaque V1.
topic acetylcholine
visual cortex organization
contrast sensitivity
normalization
primary visual cortex (V1)
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fncir.2017.00106/full
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