Author
Listed:
- Ingie Hong
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- Juhyun Kim
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Korea Brain Research Institute (KBRI))
- Thomas Hainmueller
(Medical Faculty
New York University Langone Medical Center)
- Dong Won Kim
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Aarhus University
Aarhus University)
- Joram Keijser
(Technical University of Berlin
Einstein Center for Neurosciences Berlin)
- Richard C. Johnson
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- Soo Hyun Park
(National Institute of Mental Health
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST))
- Nathachit Limjunyawong
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Mahidol University)
- Zhuonan Yang
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- David Cheon
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- Taeyoung Hwang
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins Medical Campus
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine)
- Amit Agarwal
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Institute for Anatomy and Cell Biology
University of Heidelberg)
- Thibault Cholvin
(Medical Faculty)
- Fenna M. Krienen
(Princeton University)
- Steven A. McCarroll
(Harvard Medical School)
- Xinzhong Dong
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine)
- David A. Leopold
(National Institute of Mental Health)
- Seth Blackshaw
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine)
- Henning Sprekeler
(Technical University of Berlin
Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin
Research Cluster of Excellence)
- Dwight E. Bergles
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- Marlene Bartos
(Medical Faculty)
- Solange P. Brown
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
- Richard L. Huganir
(Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University)
Abstract
The brain helps us survive by forming internal representations of the external world1,2. Excitatory cortical neurons are often precisely tuned to specific external stimuli3,4. However, inhibitory neurons, such as parvalbumin-positive (PV) interneurons, are generally less selective5. PV interneurons differ from excitatory neurons in their neurotransmitter receptor subtypes, including AMPA (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid) receptors (AMPARs)6,7. Excitatory neurons express calcium-impermeable AMPARs that contain the GluA2 subunit (encoded by GRIA2), whereas PV interneurons express receptors that lack the GluA2 subunit and are calcium-permeable (CP-AMPARs). Here we demonstrate a causal relationship between CP-AMPAR expression and the low feature selectivity of PV interneurons. We find low expression stoichiometry of GRIA2 mRNA relative to other subunits in PV interneurons that is conserved across ferrets, rodents, marmosets and humans, and causes abundant CP-AMPAR expression. Replacing CP-AMPARs in PV interneurons with calcium-impermeable AMPARs increased their orientation selectivity in the visual cortex. Manipulations to induce sparse CP-AMPAR expression demonstrated that this increase was cell-autonomous and could occur with changes beyond development. Notably, excitatory–PV interneuron connectivity rates and unitary synaptic strength were unaltered by CP-AMPAR removal, which suggested that the selectivity of PV interneurons can be altered without markedly changing connectivity. In Gria2-knockout mice, in which all AMPARs are calcium-permeable, excitatory neurons showed significantly degraded orientation selectivity, which suggested that CP-AMPARs are sufficient to drive lower selectivity regardless of cell type. Moreover, hippocampal PV interneurons, which usually exhibit low spatial tuning, became more spatially selective after removing CP-AMPARs, which indicated that CP-AMPARs suppress the feature selectivity of PV interneurons independent of modality. These results reveal a new role of CP-AMPARs in maintaining low-selectivity sensory representation in PV interneurons and implicate a conserved molecular mechanism that distinguishes this cell type in the neocortex.
Suggested Citation
Ingie Hong & Juhyun Kim & Thomas Hainmueller & Dong Won Kim & Joram Keijser & Richard C. Johnson & Soo Hyun Park & Nathachit Limjunyawong & Zhuonan Yang & David Cheon & Taeyoung Hwang & Amit Agarwal &, 2024.
"Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors govern PV neuron feature selectivity,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 635(8038), pages 398-405, November.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:635:y:2024:i:8038:d:10.1038_s41586-024-08027-2
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08027-2
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