Generation and propagation of bursts of activity in the developing basal ganglia

Author:

Klavinskis-Whiting Sebastian1,Bitzenhofer Sebastian2,Hanganu-Opatz Ileana2,Ellender Tommas13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford , Mansfield Rd, Oxford, OX13QT , United Kingdom

2. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Developmental Neurophysiology, Center for Molecular Neurobiology Hamburg (ZMNH), University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf , 20246 Hamburg , Germany

3. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Antwerp , Universiteitsplein 1, 2610 Wilrijk , Belgium

Abstract

Abstract The neonatal brain is characterized by intermittent bursts of oscillatory activity interspersed by relative silence. Although well-characterized for many cortical areas, to what extent these propagate and interact with subcortical brain areas is largely unknown. Here, early network activity was recorded from the developing basal ganglia, including motor/somatosensory cortex, dorsal striatum, and intralaminar thalamus, during the first postnatal weeks in mice. An unsupervised detection and classification method revealed two main classes of bursting activity, namely spindle bursts and nested gamma spindle bursts, characterized by oscillatory activity at ~ 10 and ~ 30 Hz frequencies, respectively. These were reliably identified across all three brain regions and exhibited region-specific differences in their structural, spectral, and developmental characteristics. Bursts of the same type often co-occurred in different brain regions and coherence and cross-correlation analyses reveal dynamic developmental changes in their interactions. The strongest interactions were seen for cortex and striatum, from the first postnatal week onwards, and cortex appeared to drive burst events in subcortical regions. Together, these results provide the first detailed description of early network activity within the developing basal ganglia and suggest that cortex is one of the main drivers of activity in downstream nuclei during this postnatal period.

Funder

MRC Career Development Award

John Fell Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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