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. 1986 Jan;6(1):68-81.
doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.06-01-00068.1986.

Reticularis thalami neurons revisited: activity changes during shifts in states of vigilance

Reticularis thalami neurons revisited: activity changes during shifts in states of vigilance

M Steriade et al. J Neurosci. 1986 Jan.

Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that inhibitory actions are exerted by reticularis thalami (RE) neurons upon thalamocortical neurons. The RE neurons were recorded in the rostral pole and lateral districts of the nucleus, and were activated monosynaptically by cortical volleys. Thalamocortical neurons were identified antidromically in intralaminar and ventrolateral nuclei. During sleep with EEG synchronization, prolonged spike barrages of RE neurons extended over the whole spindle sequences. This result suggests that RE neurons are depolarized throughout spindle oscillations, whereas thalamocortical neurons show, simultaneously, long hyperpolarizations and short rebounds. During waking, parallelism rather than reciprocity was found between RE and thalamocortical neurons. Spontaneous discharge rates almost doubled in RE neurons on arousal from sleep, and the probability of cortically evoked short-latency discharges increased. The increase in spontaneous firing rates of RE neurons during natural arousal is consistent with their short-latency synaptic excitation by stimulating the rostral brain stem reticular formation after chronic degeneration of passing fibers. We suggest that RE cells inhibit GABAergic local-circuit cells, in addition to inhibiting thalamocortical neurons, and that different ratios of inhibitory effects are exerted by RE neurons upon these two cell classes during waking and sleep. We further suggest that, upon arousal, disinhibition of thalamocortical neurons (via the local-circuit neurons) outweighs direct inhibition of the thalamocortical neurons.

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