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Stimulus novelty uncovers coding diversity in visual cortical circuits

Authors :
Marina Garrett
Peter Groblewski
Alex Piet
Doug Ollerenshaw
Farzaneh Najafi
Iryna Yavorska
Adam Amster
Corbett Bennett
Michael Buice
Shiella Caldejon
Linzy Casal
Florence D’Orazi
Scott Daniel
Saskia EJ de Vries
Daniel Kapner
Justin Kiggins
Jerome Lecoq
Peter Ledochowitsch
Sahar Manavi
Nicholas Mei
Christopher B. Morrison
Sarah Naylor
Natalia Orlova
Jed Perkins
Nick Ponvert
Clark Roll
Sam Seid
Derric Williams
Allison Williford
Ruweida Ahmed
Daniel Amine
Yazan Billeh
Chris Bowman
Nicholas Cain
Andrew Cho
Tim Dawe
Max Departee
Marie Desoto
David Feng
Sam Gale
Emily Gelfand
Nile Gradis
Conor Grasso
Nicole Hancock
Brian Hu
Ross Hytnen
Xiaoxuan Jia
Tye Johnson
India Kato
Sara Kivikas
Leonard Kuan
Quinn L’Heureux
Sophie Lambert
Arielle Leon
Elizabeth Liang
Fuhui Long
Kyla Mace
Ildefons Magrans de Abril
Chris Mochizuki
Chelsea Nayan
Katherine North
Lydia Ng
Gabriel Koch Ocker
Michael Oliver
Paul Rhoads
Kara Ronellenfitch
Kathryn Schelonka
Josh Sevigny
David Sullivan
Ben Sutton
Jackie Swapp
Thuyanh K Nguyen
Xana Waughman
Joshua Wilkes
Michael Wang
Colin Farrell
Wayne Wakeman
Hongkui Zeng
John Phillips
Stefan Mihalas
Anton Arkhipov
Christof Koch
Shawn R Olsen
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

The detection of novel stimuli is critical to learn and survive in a dynamic environment. Though novel stimuli powerfully affect brain activity, their impact on specific cell types and circuits is not well understood. Disinhibition is one candidate mechanism for novelty-induced enhancements in activity. Here we characterize the impact of stimulus novelty on disinhibitory circuit components using longitudinal 2-photon calcium imaging of Vip, Sst, and excitatory populations in the mouse visual cortex. Mice learn a behavioral task with stimuli that become highly familiar, then are tested on both familiar and novel stimuli. Mice consistently perform the task with novel stimuli, yet responses to stimulus presentations and stimulus omissions are dramatically altered. Further, we find that novelty modifies coding of visual as well as behavioral and task information. At the population level, the direction of these changes is consistent with engagement of the Vip-Sst disinhibitory circuit. At the single cell level, we identify separate clusters of Vip, Sst, and excitatory cells with unique patterns of novelty-induced coding changes. This study and the accompanying open-access dataset reveals the impact of novelty on sensory and behavioral representations in visual cortical circuits and establishes novelty as a key driver of cellular functional diversity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........eb95f8c91aba00c999a8c19cdb0d2cff