Transient Coupling between Infragranular and Subplate Layers to Layer 1 Neurons before Ear Opening and throughout the Critical Period Depends on Peripheral Activity

Binghan Xue, Xiangying Meng, Yanqing Xu, Joseph P.Y. Kao, Patrick O. Kanold

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cortical layer 1 (L1) contains a diverse population of interneurons that can modulate processing in superficial cortical layers, but the intracortical sources of synaptic input to these neurons and how these inputs change over development and with sensory experience is unknown. We here investigated the changing intracortical connectivity to L1 in the primary auditory cortex (A1) of mice of both sexes in in vitro slices across development using laser-scanning photostimulation. Before postnatal day (P)10, L1 cells receive excitatory input from within L1, L2/3, L4, and L5/6 as well as from subplate. Excitatory inputs from all layers increase, especially from L4, and peak during P10–P16, around the peak of the critical period for tonotopy. Inhibitory inputs followed a similar pattern. Functional circuit diversity in L1 emerges after P16. In adults, L1 neurons receive ascending inputs from L2/3 and L5/6, but only few inputs from L4. The transient hyperconnectivity from deep layers but not L2/3 is absent in deaf mice. Our results demonstrate that deep excitatory and superficial inhibitory circuits are tightly linked in early development and might provide a functional scaffold for the layers in between. These results suggest that early thalamically driven spontaneous and sensory activity in subplate can be relayed to L1 from the earliest ages on and shape L1 connectivity from deep layers. Our results also reveal a period of high transient columnar hyperconnectivity after ear opening coinciding with the critical period, suggesting that circuits originating in deep layers might play a key role in this process.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1702-1718
Number of pages17
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume42
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2 2022

Keywords

  • cerebral cortex
  • critical period
  • layer 1
  • subgranular
  • subplate
  • transient

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Neuroscience

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