Long-term stability of neuronal ensembles in mouse visual cortex
Long-term stability of neuronal ensembles in mouse visual cortex
Abstract Coactive neuronal ensembles are found in spontaneous and evoked cortical activity and are thought to participate in the internal representation of memories, perceptions, and mental states. In mouse visual cortex, ensembles can be optogenetically imprinted and are causally related to visual percepts, but it is still unknown how stable they are over time. Using two-photon volumetric microscopy, we performed calcium imaging over several weeks of the same neuronal populations in layer 2/3 of visual cortex of awake mice, tracking over time the activity of the same neurons in response to visual stimuli and under spontaneous activity. Only a small number of neurons remained active across days. Analyzing them, we found both stable ensembles, lasting up to 46 days, and transient ones, observed during only one imaging session. The majority of ensembles in visually-evoked activity were stable, whereas in spontaneous activity similar numbers of stable and transient ensembles were found. Among stable ensembles, more than 60 % of neurons still belonged to the same ensemble even after several weeks. These core ensemble cells had stronger functional connectivity than neurons that stopped belonging to the ensemble. Our results demonstrate that spontaneous and evoked neuronal ensembles can last weeks, providing a neuronal mechanism for the long-lasting representation of perceptual states or memories.
Yuste Rafael、P¨|rez-Ortega Jes¨2s、Alejandre-Garc¨aa Tzitzitlini
生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术细胞生物学生理学
Yuste Rafael,P¨|rez-Ortega Jes¨2s,Alejandre-Garc¨aa Tzitzitlini.Long-term stability of neuronal ensembles in mouse visual cortex[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-29].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.28.359117.点此复制
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