A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.

During quiet resting behavior, involuntary movements are suppressed. Such movement control is attributed to cortico-basal ganglia loops, yet population dynamics within these loops during resting and their relation to involuntary movements are not well characterized. Here, we show by recording cortic...

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Main Authors: Andreas Klaus, Dietmar Plenz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-12-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5147796?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d9854674b2cb46f1b5eee03647a69c002021-07-02T05:26:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852016-12-011412e100258210.1371/journal.pbio.1002582A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.Andreas KlausDietmar PlenzDuring quiet resting behavior, involuntary movements are suppressed. Such movement control is attributed to cortico-basal ganglia loops, yet population dynamics within these loops during resting and their relation to involuntary movements are not well characterized. Here, we show by recording cortical and striatal ongoing population activity in awake rats during quiet resting that intrastriatal inhibition maintains a low-correlation striatal resting state in the presence of cortical neuronal avalanches. Involuntary movements arise from disturbed striatal resting activity through two different population dynamics. Nonselectively reducing intrastriatal γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-A inhibition synchronizes striatal dynamics, leading to involuntary movements at low rate. In contrast, reducing striatal interneuron (IN)-mediated inhibition maintains decorrelation and induces intermittent involuntary movements at high rate. This latter scenario was highly effective in modulating cortical dynamics at a subsecond timescale. To distinguish intrastriatal processing from loop dynamics, cortex-striatum-midbrain cultures, which lack feedback to cortex, were used. Cortical avalanches in vitro were accompanied by low-correlated resting activity in the striatum and nonselective reduction in striatal inhibition synchronized striatal neurons similar to in vivo. Importantly, reduction of inhibition from striatal INs maintained low correlations in the striatum while reorganizing functional connectivities among striatal neurons. Our results demonstrate the importance of two major striatal microcircuits in distinctly regulating striatal and cortical resting state dynamics. These findings suggest that specific functional connectivities of the striatum that are maintained by local inhibition are important in movement control.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5147796?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreas Klaus
Dietmar Plenz
spellingShingle Andreas Klaus
Dietmar Plenz
A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Andreas Klaus
Dietmar Plenz
author_sort Andreas Klaus
title A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
title_short A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
title_full A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
title_fullStr A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
title_full_unstemmed A Low-Correlation Resting State of the Striatum during Cortical Avalanches and Its Role in Movement Suppression.
title_sort low-correlation resting state of the striatum during cortical avalanches and its role in movement suppression.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2016-12-01
description During quiet resting behavior, involuntary movements are suppressed. Such movement control is attributed to cortico-basal ganglia loops, yet population dynamics within these loops during resting and their relation to involuntary movements are not well characterized. Here, we show by recording cortical and striatal ongoing population activity in awake rats during quiet resting that intrastriatal inhibition maintains a low-correlation striatal resting state in the presence of cortical neuronal avalanches. Involuntary movements arise from disturbed striatal resting activity through two different population dynamics. Nonselectively reducing intrastriatal γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-A inhibition synchronizes striatal dynamics, leading to involuntary movements at low rate. In contrast, reducing striatal interneuron (IN)-mediated inhibition maintains decorrelation and induces intermittent involuntary movements at high rate. This latter scenario was highly effective in modulating cortical dynamics at a subsecond timescale. To distinguish intrastriatal processing from loop dynamics, cortex-striatum-midbrain cultures, which lack feedback to cortex, were used. Cortical avalanches in vitro were accompanied by low-correlated resting activity in the striatum and nonselective reduction in striatal inhibition synchronized striatal neurons similar to in vivo. Importantly, reduction of inhibition from striatal INs maintained low correlations in the striatum while reorganizing functional connectivities among striatal neurons. Our results demonstrate the importance of two major striatal microcircuits in distinctly regulating striatal and cortical resting state dynamics. These findings suggest that specific functional connectivities of the striatum that are maintained by local inhibition are important in movement control.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5147796?pdf=render
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