Abstract
Key points:
The primary olfactory (or piriform) cortex is a promising model system for understanding how the cerebral cortex processes sensory information, although an investigation of the piriform cortex is hindered by a lack of detailed information about the intrinsic electrical properties of its component neurons.
In the present study, we quantify the properties of voltage-dependent sodium currents and voltage- and calcium-dependent potassium currents in two important classes of excitatory neurons in the main input layer of the piriform cortex.
We identify several classes of these currents and show that their properties are similar to those found in better-studied cortical regions.
Our detailed quantitative descriptions of these currents will be valuable to computational neuroscientists who aim to build models that explain how the piriform cortex encodes odours.
Abstract: The primary olfactory cortex (or piriform cortex, PC) is an anatomically simple palaeocortex that is increasingly used as a model system for investigating cortical sensory processing. However, little information is available on the intrinsic electrical conductances in neurons of the PC, hampering efforts to build realistic computational models of this cortex. In the present study, we used nucleated macropatches and whole-cell recordings to rigorously quantify the biophysical properties of voltage-gated sodium (NaV), voltage-gated potassium (KV) and calcium-activated potassium (KCa) conductances in two major classes of glutamatergic neurons in layer 2 of the PC, semilunar (SL) cells and superficial pyramidal (SP) cells. We found that SL and SP cells both express a fast-inactivating NaV current, two types of KV current (A-type and delayed rectifier-type) and three types of KCa current (fast-, medium- and slow-afterhyperpolarization currents). The kinetic and voltage-dependent properties of the NaV and KV conductances were, with some exceptions, identical in SL and SP cells and similar to those found in neocortical pyramidal neurons. The KCa conductances were also similar across the different types of neurons. Our results are summarized in a series of empirical equations that should prove useful to computational neuroscientists seeking to model the PC. More broadly, our findings indicate that, at the level of single-cell electrical properties, this palaeocortex is not so different from the neocortex, vindicating efforts to use the PC as a model of cortical sensory processing in general.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 5397-5414 |
Journal | Journal of Physiology |
Volume | 596 |
Issue number | 22 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Nov 2018 |