Published July 13, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Cell-type-specific plasticity of inhibitory interneurons in the rehabilitation of auditory cortex after peripheral damage

Description

Peripheral sensory organ damage leads to compensatory cortical plasticity that is associated with a remarkable recovery of cortical responses to sound. The precise mechanisms that explain how this plasticity is implemented and distributed over a diverse collection of excitatory and inhibitory cortical neurons remain unknown. After noise trauma and persistent peripheral deficits, we found recovered sound-evoked activity in mouse A1 excitatory principal neurons (PNs), parvalbumin- and vasoactive intestinal peptide-expressing neurons (PVs and VIPs), but reduced activity in somatostatin-expressing neurons (SOMs). This cell-type-specific recovery was also associated with cell-type-specific intrinsic plasticity. These findings, along with our computational modelling results, are consistent with the notion that PV plasticity contributes to PN stability, SOM plasticity allows for increased PN and PV activity, and VIP plasticity enables PN and PV recovery by inhibiting SOMs.

Data availability

The experimental processed data (source data) that support the findings of this study are provided in this paper. Upon request, the raw data files will be made available by the corresponding authors. Source data are provided in this paper.

The simulation data, the code that produced the modeling panels (Fig. 3, Fig. 7, and Supplementary Fig. 5), and the code that runs the spiking model and mean-field theory can be found on Zenodo. The code is written in a combination of C and MATLAB. Custom-written MATLAB codes to exact and analyze 2P data can be found on Zenodo.

Files

Cell-type-specific-plasticity-of-inhibitory-interneurons-in-the-rehabilitation-of-auditory-cortex-after-peripheral-damage.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-39732-7
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6735

Funding

National Institutes of Health
DC019618
National Institutes of Health
R01 EB033172
Hearing Health Foundation
855358
Swartz Foundation
Fellowship for Theory in Neuroscience
Burroughs Wellcome Fund
Career Award at the Scientific Interface
Simons Foundation
Collaboration on the Global Brain

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division, Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Neurobiology, Statistics