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Publication : Electrically coupled inhibitory interneurons constrain long-range connectivity of cortical networks.

First Author  Kraft AW Year  2020
Journal  Neuroimage Volume  215
Pages  116810 PubMed ID  32276058
Mgi Jnum  J:294645 Mgi Id  MGI:6445308
Doi  10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116810 Citation  Kraft AW, et al. (2020) Electrically coupled inhibitory interneurons constrain long-range connectivity of cortical networks. Neuroimage 215:116810
abstractText  Spontaneous infra-slow brain activity (ISA) exhibits a high degree of temporal synchrony, or correlation, between distant brain regions. The spatial organization of ISA synchrony is not explained by anatomical connections alone, suggesting that active neural processes coordinate spontaneous activity. Inhibitory interneurons (IINs) form electrically coupled connections via the gap junction protein connexin 36 (Cx36) and networks of interconnected IINs are known to influence neural synchrony over short distances. However, the role of electrically coupled IIN networks in regulating spontaneous correlation over the entire brain is unknown. In this study, we performed OIS imaging on Cx36-/- mice to examine the role of this gap junction in ISA correlation across the entire cortex. We show that Cx36 deletion increased long-distance intra-hemispheric anti-correlation and inter-hemispheric correlation in spontaneous ISA. This suggests that electrically coupled IIN networks modulate ISA synchrony over long cortical distances.
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