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Publication : General Anesthesia Decouples Cortical Pyramidal Neurons.

First Author  Suzuki M Year  2020
Journal  Cell Volume  180
Issue  4 Pages  666-676.e13
PubMed ID  32084339 Mgi Jnum  J:347884
Mgi Id  MGI:7627219 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2020.01.024
Citation  Suzuki M, et al. (2020) General Anesthesia Decouples Cortical Pyramidal Neurons. Cell 180(4):666-676.e13
abstractText  The mystery of general anesthesia is that it specifically suppresses consciousness by disrupting feedback signaling in the brain, even when feedforward signaling and basic neuronal function are left relatively unchanged. The mechanism for such selectiveness is unknown. Here we show that three different anesthetics have the same disruptive influence on signaling along apical dendrites in cortical layer 5 pyramidal neurons in mice. We found that optogenetic depolarization of the distal apical dendrites caused robust spiking at the cell body under awake conditions that was blocked by anesthesia. Moreover, we found that blocking metabotropic glutamate and cholinergic receptors had the same effect on apical dendrite decoupling as anesthesia or inactivation of the higher-order thalamus. If feedback signaling occurs predominantly through apical dendrites, the cellular mechanism we found would explain not only how anesthesia selectively blocks this signaling but also why conscious perception depends on both cortico-cortical and thalamo-cortical connectivity.
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