Long-range and local circuits for top-down modulation of visual cortex processing

Siyu Zhang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Min Xu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Tsukasa Kamigaki(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Johnny Phong Hoang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Wei-Cheng Chang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Sean Jenvay(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kazunari Miyamichi(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Liqun Luo(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yang Dan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
August 7, 2014
Cited by 878

Abstract

Top-down modulation of sensory processing allows the animal to select inputs most relevant to current tasks. We found that the cingulate (Cg) region of the mouse frontal cortex powerfully influences sensory processing in the primary visual cortex (V1) through long-range projections that activate local γ-aminobutyric acid-ergic (GABAergic) circuits. Optogenetic activation of Cg neurons enhanced V1 neuron responses and improved visual discrimination. Focal activation of Cg axons in V1 caused a response increase at the activation site but a decrease at nearby locations (center-surround modulation). Whereas somatostatin-positive GABAergic interneurons contributed preferentially to surround suppression, vasoactive intestinal peptide-positive interneurons were crucial for center facilitation. Long-range corticocortical projections thus act through local microcircuits to exert spatially specific top-down modulation of sensory processing.


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