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Publication : Climbing fiber synapses rapidly and transiently inhibit neighboring Purkinje cells via ephaptic coupling.

First Author  Han KS Year  2020
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  23
Issue  11 Pages  1399-1409
PubMed ID  32895566 Mgi Jnum  J:299954
Mgi Id  MGI:6501411 Doi  10.1038/s41593-020-0701-z
Citation  Han KS, et al. (2020) Climbing fiber synapses rapidly and transiently inhibit neighboring Purkinje cells via ephaptic coupling. Nat Neurosci 23(11):1399-1409
abstractText  Climbing fibers from the inferior olive make strong excitatory synapses onto cerebellar Purkinje cell (PC) dendrites and trigger distinctive responses known as complex spikes. We found that, in awake mice, a complex spike in one PC suppressed conventional simple spikes in neighboring PCs for several milliseconds. This involved a new ephaptic coupling, in which an excitatory synapse generated large negative extracellular signals that nonsynaptically inhibited neighboring PCs. The distance dependence of complex spike-simple spike ephaptic signaling, combined with the known CF divergence, allowed a single inferior olive neuron to influence the output of the cerebellum by synchronously suppressing the firing of potentially over 100 PCs. Optogenetic studies in vivo and dynamic clamp studies in slice indicated that such brief PC suppression, as a result of either ephaptic signaling or other mechanisms, could effectively promote firing in neurons in the deep cerebellar nuclei with remarkable speed and precision.
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