Context-dependent activation of V1 parvalbumin interneurons enhances visual discrimination.
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Type
Change log
Authors
Abstract
Inhibition is critical for balanced cortical activity and learning. Parvalbumin-expressing cells (PV) are the most common cortical inhibitory interneurons. Strong PV activation inactivates cortical regions. However, the effect of moderate activation on vision and dependence on activation strength, timing, and task difficulty is not established. We investigated these three major factors during visual discriminations in mice. Moderate PV activation in the primary visual cortex (V1) improved easy but not difficult discriminations. It did so only during the initial 120 ms after stimulus onset, corresponding to the initial feedforward processing sweep. Both easy and difficult discriminations required undisturbed late phase activity beyond 120 ms, highlighting the importance of sustained V1 activity. Combined optogenetic activation and two-photon imaging showed that behavioral effects were associated with V1 response selectivity changes. A circuit model with nonlinear activation and strong competitive interactions between V1 cells captured the data. This demonstrates that early and sustained V1 activity is crucial for perceptual discrimination and delineates conditions when PV activation shapes neuronal selectivity to improve behavior.
Description
Acknowledgements: We thank members of the Poort and Beltramo labs for valuable discussions, and John McClure Jr for support throughout the study. We thank Riccardo Beltramo for comments on the manuscript, and Elisa Galliano and Edina Horvath-Gulacsi for help with histology and immunostaining.
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
1545-7885
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher DOI
Rights and licensing
Sponsorship
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (2279392)
Medical Research Council (MC-PC-MR-X012271/1)

