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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 2001, 21(17):6791-6801
Developmental Inhibitory Gate Controls the Relay of Activity to
the Superficial Layers of the Visual Cortex
Carlos
Rozas2,
Hosea
Frank1,
Arnold J.
Heynen1,
Bernardo
Morales2,
Mark F.
Bear1, and
Alfredo
Kirkwood2
1 Department of Neuroscience, Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, and
2 Mind Brain Institute, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, Maryland 21218
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ABSTRACT |
A developmental reduction in the radial transmission of synaptic
activity has been proposed to underlie the end of the critical period
for experience-dependent modification in layers II/III of the visual
cortex. Using paired-pulse stimulation, we investigated in visual
cortical slices how the propagation of synaptic activity to the
superficial layers changes during development and how this process is
affected by sensory experience. The results can be summarized as
follows. (1) Layers II/III responses to repetitive stimulation of the
white matter become increasingly depressed between the third and sixth
week of postnatal development, a time course that parallels the end of
the critical period. (2) Paired-pulse depression is reduced after dark
rearing and also by blocking inhibitory synaptic transmission. (3)
Paired-pulse depression and its regulation by age and sensory
experience is more pronounced when stimulation is applied to the white
matter than when applied to layer IV. Together, these results are
consistent with the idea that the maturation of intracortical
inhibition reduces the capability of the cortex to relay incoming
high-frequency patterns of activity to the supragranular layers.
Key words:
critical period; plasticity; GABA; paired-pulse
depression; neocortex; layer IV
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INTRODUCTION |
Sensory input is crucial for the
maturation of connectivity within visual cortex, but only during an
early postnatal period (Hubel and Wiesel, 1970 ). In rodents, the
critical period peaks by the third postnatal week. At this age, a
simple manipulation, such as monocular deprivation, shifts visual
cortical responsiveness toward the nondeprived eye. As cortical
circuits mature, cortical plasticity diminishes rapidly. Thus, by the
fifth week of age, monocular deprivation has hardly any effect
(Fagiolini et al., 1994 ; Gordon et al., 1996 ). The factors that
restrict experience-dependent plasticity to a short critical period
remain unclear.
It is believed that visual cortical plasticity involves some form of
use-dependent synaptic modification (Bear et al., 1987 ; Singer, 1995 ;
Katz and Shatz, 1996 ). Intracortical inhibition is ideally poised to
restrict these activity-dependent mechanisms to a short critical
period. By reducing excitation, synaptic inhibition can limit
activity-dependent plasticity of synaptic transmission. For example in
neocortex in vitro, recruitment of GABAergic inhibition can
limit induction of long-term potentiation (LTP), currently the best
understood model of synaptic modification (Artola and Singer, 1987 ;
Kirkwood and Bear, 1994 ). Also, anatomical (Blue and Parnavelas, 1983 ;
Guo et al., 1997 ) and physiological (Komatsu, 1983 ; Luhmann and Prince,
1991 ) findings indicate that synaptic inhibition matures later than
excitatory transmission within neocortex. This mismatch in the
maturation of excitation and inhibition may provide a window of
opportunity, early in postnatal life, for activity-dependent plasticity
to occur. Consistent with this idea, dark rearing, which prolongs the
critical period (Cynader and Mitchel, 1980 ; Mower et al., 1985 ; Guire
et al., 1999 ), delays the anatomical maturation of inhibition within
visual cortex (Blue and Parnavelas, 1983 ).
We have proposed that inhibitory circuits gate the induction of
plasticity in superficial cortical layers by constraining the types of
activity patterns that reach this region (Kirkwood and Bear, 1994 ;
Kirkwood et al., 1995 ). Synapses in layers II/III, which can be
modified by experience during a well defined critical period (Daw,
1994 ), receive retinal input primarily via excitatory stellate cells in
layer IV that are the major target of thalamocortical axons conveying
visual activity. We hypothesized that recruitment of GABAergic circuits
inhibits stellate cells in layer IV and hence reduces the transfer of
geniculocortical activity to layers II/III. According to this idea,
early in development, when inhibitory circuits are not fully formed,
patterned activity is faithfully relayed by layer IV to layers II/III,
where it can trigger plasticity. Later on, as the efficacy of
inhibition increases, activity is filtered out at the level of layer
IV, preventing activity-dependent modification of layers II/III
synapses. Thus, although layers II/III synapses remain modifiable for a
considerable time, the activity requirements for plasticity may be
reached only during a short critical period. To further investigate
this hypothesis, we examined responses of layers II/III to paired-pulse
stimulation (PPS) applied to the white matter and layer IV. Our results
indicate that during development, coincident with the decline of the
critical period, there is an increasing attenuation in the response of layers II/III to repetitive activation of the white matter.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Slice preparation. Coronal slices (300-400 µm)
from the visual cortex of 3- to 8-week-old Long-Evans rats were
prepared as described previously (Kirkwood and Bear, 1994 ). Briefly,
after sectioning in ice-cold oxygenated 95%
O2/5% CO2 dissection
buffer containing (in mM):
sucrose 212.7, KCl 5, NaH2PO4 1.25, MgCl2 3, CaCl2 1, NaHCO3 26, dextrose 10, and kynurenate 10, slices were transferred to a storage chamber containing normal artificial CSF
(ACSF) for at least 1 hr before recording. Normal ACSF is similar to
the dissection ACSF except that sucrose is replaced by 124 mM NaCl, MgCl2 is lowered
to 1 mM, CaCl2 is raised to
2 mM, and kynurenate is omitted. Most of the
experiments were performed in an interface chamber that was perfused
continuously at a rate of 2 ml/min with 30°C ACSF saturated with 95%
O2 and 5% CO2.
Slice stimulation. Synaptic responses were evoked with 0.2 msec pulses of 15-300 µA amplitude delivered using a bipolar
stimulating electrode (FHC, 200 µm diameter). The visual cortex was
stimulated at one of two sites: (1) at the border of the white matter
and layer VI, termed "white matter stimulation," and (2) in the
middle of the cortical thickness, approximately equidistant from the pia and the white matter, termed "layer IV stimulation." The border of layers IV and V in area 17 (OC1) lies halfway between the pia and
the white matter (Zilles, 1985 ). Thus, the site of middle layer
stimulation encompassed lower layer IV and superficial layer V, but
excluded layer III.
PPS was delivered every 15 sec. In every experiment the interstimulus
interval (ISI) was varied systematically from 20 msec up to 2560 msec,
in increments that doubled the ISI of the previous stimulus pair. Thus,
a complete series consisted of a sequence of paired pulses with ISIs of
20, 40, 80, 160, 320, 640, 1280, and 2560 msec. To compute paired pulse
depression (PPD), the amplitude of the response to the second pulse of
the pair was divided by the amplitude of the response to the first
pulse in the pair. In each slice, at least three consecutive ISI series
were run and averaged. For analysis we considered only data from
experiments in which the response to the first pulse was stable (<3%
variation over the course of 10 min). In pharmacological experiments,
comparisons were made between measurements taken immediately before and
30 min after drug application. In control experiments, no net changes in PPD were detected over this period of time
(F(7,16) = 0.72; p = 0.9994). Statistical significance was assessed using two-way repeated
measures ANOVA followed by the Fisher post hoc test.
Slice recording. Microelectrodes were filled with ACSF (1-2
M ) for extracellular recording. The amplitude of the maximum negative-going field potential (FP) recorded in layer III was used as a
measure of the evoked population excitatory synaptic response. Changes
in the amplitude of the negative-going FP reflect changes in the
magnitude of a synaptic current sink in this region (Mitzdorf, 1985 ;
Aizenman et al., 1996 ) and correlate with changes in the initial slope
of EPSPs recorded intracellularly in layer III neurons (Kirkwood and
Bear, 1994 ). Intracellular recordings were performed with
microelectrodes filled with 3 M K Acetate (80-120 M ). Only cells with resting membrane potentials more negative than 70 mV and input resistances >20 M were studied. For
whole-cell voltage clamp, the cells were visually identified with an
infrared differential interference contrast Zeiss microscope. The patch pipettes (2-4 M ) were filled with internal solution consisting of (in mM): 130 CsF, 8 KCl, 10 EGTA,
10 HEPES, 2 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS),
10 QX-314, pH 7.4, 275-285 mOsm. The junction potential (typically <5
mV) was compensated. Only cells having a resting membrane potential
more negative than 65 mV, an access resistance <20 M (8-18 M ,
compensated at 80%), and an input resistance >100 M (130-410
M ) were studied. Under these recording conditions, the IPSCs
disappeared within 10-20 min, depending on the access resistance (see
Fig. 2B). All drugs were purchased from Sigma (St.
Louis, MO)/RBI (Natick, MA).
Unless stated otherwise, in vitro recordings were performed
on visual cortical slices prepared from 5- to 6-week-old rats. Pulsed
stimulation was applied to the white matter at an intensity that evoked
a response magnitude ~50% of maximum.
In vivo recordings. Adult (p > 90) male rats were initially anesthetized with Nembutal (65 mg/kg,
i.p.) supplemented with Isofluorene (2.0-3.0% in 100% oxygen),
tracheotomized, and then placed in a stereotaxic frame. Animals were
artificially ventilated (100% O2, 40 bpm) and
maintained at 37 ± 0.5°C. Anesthesia was maintained by
continuous administration of Nembutal (6-10 mg/hr) through an
intraperitoneal catheter. The eyes were covered throughout experimentation, except during positioning of a stimulating electrode into the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus (dLGN).
A monopolar recording electrode (<1.0 M ) was positioned in the
primary visual cortex (7.0 mm posterior to bregma; 3.0-4.0 mm lateral
to the midline). A screw inserted into the bone overlying the
cerebellum served as recording ground. A concentric bipolar electrode
(FHC; 75 µm diameter) was positioned 3.8 mm posterior, 3.3 mm
lateral to stimulate the dLGN ipsilateral to the visual cortex in which
recordings were obtained. To aid in the positioning of the stimulating
electrode in the dLGN, visually driven multiunit activity was monitored
from this electrode as it was being tracked down through neocortex and
overlying hippocampus. The final depth of the stimulating electrode tip
was within 100-200 µm of first encountering visually responsive
neurons. Histological analysis demonstrated that the stimulating
electrode tip was typically positioned within the first 200 µm of the
dorsal surface of the dLGN.
Field potentials were elicited with 0.2 msec, 0.3-0.8 mA stimulation
pulses, filtered at 0.1 Hz and 3.0 kHz, digitized at 160 kHz, and
stored and analyzed using Experimenter's Workbench (DataWave
Technologies; Longmont, CO). Before the beginning of each experiment, a
full input-output series was performed, and a stimulation intensity
yielding an FP amplitude 50-60% of maximum was used for the remainder
of experimentation.
Current source density analysis. A roving electrode was
tracked down in 100 µm steps from cortical surface to a depth of
2.2-2.5 mm. At each recording depth 10 paired-pulsed stimuli (40 msec ISI) were delivered to the dLGN. After completion of the recording sessions, electrolytic lesions were made along the track to allow for
verification of the location and track of the roving electrode. The CSD
profile was constructed as described previously (Mitzdorf, 1985 ;
Aizenman et al., 1996 ), using a spatial differentiation grid of 200 µm.
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RESULTS |
Probing the gate with paired-pulse stimulation
In visual cortical slices, the induction of LTP in layers II/III
depends critically on the site of stimulation and the age of the
animal. High-frequency stimulation of the white matter (WM) reliably
induces LTP in layers II/III (WM III LTP) only in slices of
immature animals (<4 weeks old), whereas stimulation of layer IV
produces LTP (IV III LTP) throughout postnatal life (Kirkwood et
al., 1995 ). According to the plasticity gate hypothesis, the
developmental decrease in the magnitude of WM III LTP and experience-dependent plasticity results from the maturation of intracortical inhibition, which prevents certain activity patterns from
reaching modifiable synapses in layers II/III. To investigate developmental changes in the propagation of neural activity to the
upper layers of the visual cortex, we studied the response of layers
II/III to PPS. This type of stimulation has been widely used to
characterize the frequency response of cortical circuitry in slices
(Luhmann and Prince, 1990 ; Ramoa and Sur, 1996 ; Castro-Alamancos and
Connors, 1997 ; Buonomano and Merzenich, 1998 ).
One potential complication in the interpretation of FPs evoked by WM
PPS in slices, however, is the possible contribution of antidromically
activated cortical circuits, particularly the strong collateral
projections of layers V and VI neurons. Previously we used current
source density (CSD) analysis to study the spatiotemporal patterns of
activity evoked by PPS of the WM (Aizenman et al., 1996 ). In the
present study we repeated this analysis in vivo under
conditions in which antidromic cortical activation is minimal, with the
aim of assessing the validity of the approach in slices.
In this series of experiments a recording electrode was tracked
ventrally through Oc1 in 100 µm steps from the dural surface to well
below white matter ( 2000 µm ventral). After each 100 µm
advancement of the recording electrode, FPs (n = 10) in
response to PPS (40 msec ISI) applied to the dLGN were collected and
subjected to CSD analysis. A representative example of the FP profile
recorded through Oc1 in response to the first stimulus pulse is
presented in Figure 1A.
The FP recorded through the depth of Oc1 was consistently observed as a
primarily negative-going potential, having a maximum negativity and
shortest latency at a depth corresponding to layer IV and deep layer
III (~600-800 µm ventral to the dural surface). The resultant CSD
profile for the FP data is presented in Figure 1B.
Initial short-latency (~2.0-5.0 msec) current sinks were observed in
layer IV and lower (deep) layer III, with corresponding sources located
in adjacent supragranular and infragranular layers. These initial
current sinks were followed by sinks in supragranular (depth
~200-500 µm) and infragranular (depth ~900-1100 µm) layers, with the latency of these sinks (~4.0-10.0 msec) increasing with increasing distance from layer IV/deep layer III. This laminar pattern
and temporal order of transmembrane currents was consistent across
animals (n = 3) and is consistent with previous reports (Mitzdorf, 1985 ; Vaknin et al., 1988 ; Brankack et al., 1990 ; Ferster, 1990 ; Kenan-Vaknin and Teyler, 1994 ). As in previous studies performed under similar conditions, there was no indication that layer VI neurons
were antidromically activated by this stimulation (Swadlow and
Weyand, 1981 ; Ferster and Lindstrom, 1983 ; Bourassa and
Deschenes, 1995 ).

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Figure 1.
Paired-pulse depression of layers II/III responses
evoked by stimulation of the dLGN in vivo.
A, C, Field potential profiles recorded
in vivo at different cortical depths. A,
FPs recorded in response to the first stimulus pulse; C,
FPs obtained in response to the second pulse (40 msec ISI).
B, D, CSD profiles obtained with the FPs
depicted in A and C, respectively. Notice
the marked depression of the FPs recorded in upper layers II/III as
well as the corresponding decrease in current sinks
(downward and in black) in response to
the second stimulus pulse. The sum of the CSD profiles is indicated at
the bottom in B and D.
Arrowheads mark the boundaries of the cortical
layers.
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Figure 1, C and D, presents the FP and CSD
profile obtained in response to the second stimulus pulse. A decrease
in the amplitude of the negative-going component of the FP recorded
from the cortical surface through to layer IV is apparent in response
to the second stimulus pulse (compare FP profiles in A with
C). A corresponding decrease in the amplitude of current
sinks located in supragranular layers was also observed (depth
~200-500 µm; response to pulse 2/pulse 1 = 0.50 ± 0.3;
n = 3). The qualitative as well as quantitative changes
in current sink amplitude observed in the present in vivo experiments are remarkably similar to those observed when PPS is
applied to the WM in vitro (Aizenman et al., 1996 , their
Fig. 5). This comparison suggests that WM PPS is a useful
technique for studying the responses of cortical afferents to
orthodromic activation.
Using slices of visual cortex, we performed an extensive
characterization of the responses evoked by PPS in which we
systematically varied the ISI, stimulation intensity, and stimulation
site as well as the postnatal age and visual experience of the animals. Because of the large number of experiments required, synaptic responses
were monitored extracellularly as field potentials (FPs), which are
relatively easy to record. FPs have been used successfully on many
occasions to study synaptic changes; nevertheless, it was desirable to
confirm that the effects of PPS on the FPs do correlate with changes in
synaptic responses measured intracellularly. Therefore, we conducted a
series of experiments in which the responses to PPS were monitored
simultaneously using extracellular FPs and isolated EPSCs in
visually identified layers II/III pyramidal cells. EPSCs were isolated
by recording at 70 mV and omitting ATP and GTP and including DIDS and
CsF in the intracellular recording
electrode to block IPSCs (Nelson et al., 1994 ). In these experiments
the stimulation intensity was adjusted to evoke a half-maximal field
response, and paired-pulse stimulation was delivered at varying ISIs
from 20 to 2560 msec (see Materials and Methods). The results of these
experiments are shown in Figure 2. Unlike
in hippocampus, where PPS produces a facilitation of the response
evoked by the second stimulus pulse, in neocortex PPS of the white
matter typically produces a depression of the second response. This PPD
was observed in both the FP and EPSC, and it was more pronounced at
shorter ISIs. Figure 2C provides an example of the PPD
observed in the layers II/III FP and EPSC in response to paired-pulse
stimulation (20-80 msec ISI) of the WM. In this and two other
experiments, the EPSC had a complex shape with two distinguishable
components, possibly reflecting monosynaptic and polysynaptic (Fig.
2D, arrowhead) activity. In these three
cases the later phase of the EPSC was most noticeably affected by
paired-pulse stimulation (Fig. 2D), which is
consistent with our previous observation that PPS preferentially
affects late polysynaptic inputs onto layers II/III neurons (Aizenman et al., 1996 ).

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Figure 2.
Paired-pulse stimulation produces comparable
depression in both EPSCs and FPs. A, Diagram of the
experimental conditions. Stimulation was applied in the white matter or
in layer IV while isolated EPSCs and FPs were recorded simultaneously
in layers II/III. B, IPSCs (recorded at 0 mV) but not
EPSCs (recorded at 70 mV) were rapidly blocked in our recording
conditions. Traces are synaptic currents immediately
(black) and 10 min after (red) going into
whole-cell mode. C, Results from a representative
experiment showing responses to a series of paired pulses of increasing
interstimulus interval (from 20 to 80 msec) applied to the white
matter. For each ISI, the average of four consecutive FPs is shown on
the top, and the corresponding EPSCs are shown on the
bottom. The amplitude of the second response divided by
the amplitude of the first response was used to calculate paired-pulse
interactions. D, In cells showing complex responses,
paired-pulse stimulation preferentially affected the later component
(indicated after arrowhead) of the EPSC.
Superimposed traces are responses to the first
stimulation pulse (black) and the second stimulation
pulse (red). For clarity, only responses to short ISIs
(20, 40, and 80 msec) are shown. Traces on the
right are from the same cell as in C.
E, Average results of 10 experiments (with stimulation
applied to layer IV) indicate a similar degree of paired-pulse
depression in the FP ( ) and in the EPSC ( ).
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A quantitative comparison of the degree of PPD observed in the FP and
EPSC was done with data obtained with layer IV stimulation, which
evokes similar although smaller PPD as compared with WM (see below).
The degree of depression was quantified as the ratio of the second
response amplitude to the first response amplitude. As shown in Figure
2E, the FP and the EPSC showed comparable degrees of
paired-pulse depression at all ISIs
(F(8,168) = 0.214; p = 0.988; n = 10), indicating that the depression of the
FP response truly reflects a reduction in synaptic activation.
Qualitatively similar results were also observed with white matter
stimulation (n = 3) (Fig. 2C). Thus, we are
confident that measurement of FP amplitude is an adequate approach for
studying paired-pulse interactions.
In a final set of control experiments, we asked whether changes in axon
excitability contribute to paired-pulse depression. In these
experiments we measured the fiber volley (FV) in conjunction with FP
amplitudes. As shown in Figure 3,
paired-pulse stimulation of the white matter produced a substantial
depression of the FPs (F(7,136) = 8.139; p < 0.001) but not the associated FV
(F(7,136) = 0.238; p = 0.975). We further confirmed this finding by measuring the FV under
excitatory transmission blockade with 10 mM
kynurenic acid. Again PPS had no effect on the FV
(F(7,112) = 0.991; p = 0.442), whereas the FPs were once again depressed when, before kynurenic acid administration, recordings were performed in normal ACSF
(F(7,112) = 11.533; p < 0.001). Together these experiments indicate that paired-pulse
depression is not caused by a reduction in axon excitability.

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Figure 3.
Paired-pulse depression evoked by white matter
stimulation is not accompanied by a change in fiber volley amplitude.
A, Superimposed traces are responses to
the first stimulation pulse (left) and the second
stimulation pulse (right) for a complete ISI series
(from 20 to 2560 msec). Traces were recorded before
(black) and in the presence of 10 mM
kynurenic acid (red). Arrowheads indicate
the fiber volley. B, Graph summarizing the effects of
PPS on the amplitude of the FP (open symbols) and on the
FV (filled symbols). The FP and FV were recorded
either simultaneously (circles; n = 18) or before and after bath application of kynurenic acid
(triangles; n = 15). Stimulation was
applied to the white matter.
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Involvement of inhibition in PPD evoked with white
matter stimulation
Effects of GABA antagonists on PPD
Previous studies suggest an involvement of GABAergic inhibition in
cortical PPD (Ramoa and Sur, 1996 ; Castro-Alamancos and Connors, 1997 ).
In cortex, GABA activates two processes, a fast IPSC mediated by GABAa
receptors and a slower IPSC mediated by GABAb receptors. The GABAa
response typically peaks at ~20-30 msec, whereas the GABAb response
peaks considerably later, at hundreds of milliseconds (Alger and
Nicoll, 1982 ). We investigated the contribution of these two processes
in PPD by studying the effect of selective GABA receptor antagonists on
responses evoked using a large range of ISIs (from 20 to 2560 msec). To
block GABAa receptors we used the antagonist picrotoxin, which was bath
applied at a subsaturating concentration (0.2 µM) to
avoid the development of paroxismal discharges. Even at this
concentration, picrotoxin increased the FP response. To ensure that the
FPs evoked before and after picrotoxin application were matched in
size, and to prevent excessive excitation, we reduced stimulation
intensity. We studied only those cases in which the final stimulus
intensity was >150 µA, in the range at which PPD is independent of
stimulus intensity (see Fig. 5). The results of 17 of these experiments are shown in Figure 4A.
In control conditions, PPS clearly depressed the second response at all
the ISIs tested. The degree of depression was maximal at the shortest
ISI (20 msec) and minimal at the longest ISI (2560 msec). Application
of picrotoxin consistently reduced the degree of PPD, particularly at
the shorter ISIs. A two-factor repeated measures ANOVA revealed a
significant interaction between drug and ISI
(F(7,32) = 8.124; p = 0.0001), and post hoc tests confirmed significant
differences (p < 0.001) at ISIs of 40 and 80 msec (Fig. 4A). Application of the GABAb antagonist
saclofen (150 µM) also reduced PPD
(F(7,16) = 2.977; p < 0.0067) (Figure 4B), but at longer ISIs. Post
hoc analysis demonstrated a statistically significant decrease in
PPD at ISIs of 80, 160, and 320 msec. In addition to studying the
effects of GABAergic antagonism, we also investigated the effects of
increasing the efficacy of inhibition using the benzodiazepine agonist
diazepam (40 µM). As shown in Figure
4C, diazepam, which enhances the evoked GABAa response, induced a small yet consistent increase in PPD
(F(7,34) = 2.31; p = 0.036) at shorter ISIs (20 and 40 msec). Interestingly, picrotoxin, saclofen, and diazepam had no significant effect on PPD evoked at the
longest ISI used (2560 msec).

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Figure 4.
Involvement of inhibitory circuitry in
paired-pulse depression evoked with white matter stimulation.
A, Bath application of the GABAa antagonist picrotoxin
(PTX; 0.2 µM) reduces paired-pulse
depression at short ISIs. ISIs at which the effect of PTX was
significant (0.01 level; see Results) are labeled with an
asterisk. B, Bath application of the
GABAb antagonist saclofen (150 µM) reduces paired-pulse
depression at intermediate ISIs. C, Bath application of
the benzodiazepine agonist Diazepam (40 µM) enhances
paired-pulse depression at short ISIs. The average difference in
paired-pulse response ratio between control and in the presence of drug
is plotted in the bottom panels of A-C.
Notice the change in axis scale in A and
B. D, Simultaneous intracellular and
extracellular recordings reveal a strong similarity between time course
of the IPSP and paired-pulse depression of the FP. Top
trace, Synaptic response recorded at a depolarized level ( 65
mV) reveals an n-shaped hyperpolarizing IPSP. This
trace is replotted in the bottom panel
using the same logarithmic time scale as the ratio for paired-pulse
depression of FPs (solid line).
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An involvement of synaptic inhibition in PPD was suggested at the
outset by the peculiar n-shape of the PPD profiles, which resembles the
time course of the intracellularly recorded IPSP. Like the PPD
profiles, a typical IPSP is biphasic, with a fast component mediated by
GABAa receptors that peaks early (at ~20 msec) followed by a later
component mediated by GABAb receptors that peaks at ~150 msec. The
similarity in time course between PPD and the IPSC was assessed by
performing simultaneous intracellular and extracellular recordings in
layers II/III. As is shown in Figure 4D, both the
IPSP and the PPD profiles are n-shaped, with peaks and valleys
occurring at comparable times.
Effects of stimulation intensity on PPD
Because PPD was evoked using electrical stimulation, it was
crucial to determine how PPD varied with stimulus intensity. The effects of increasing stimulation intensity on the response to paired
pulses (ISIs of 20, 40, and 80 msec) applied to the white matter is
shown in Figure 5. No PPD was observed at
low stimulation intensities. On the contrary, there was even some
facilitation in the response to the 40 and 80 msec pairs. As
stimulation intensity was increased, however, depression developed and
reached a stable level at a stimulation intensity that evoked a
half-maximal FP (Fig. 5B).

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Figure 5.
Paired-pulse depression depends on stimulus
intensity. FPs were recorded in layers II/III in response to WM
stimulation. A, Results from a representative experiment
showing FPs in response to a series of paired pulses of increasing
intensity (25, 50, 100, 200, and 400 µA; ordered
vertically) and increasing ISIs (20, 40, and 80 msec;
ordered horizontally). Traces are
averages of four consecutive responses. B, Summary of 15 experiments performed as in A. The graph
shows the relationship between stimulus intensity and paired-pulse
response ratio for the three ISIs tested (left y-axis:
= 20 msec, = 40 msec, = 80 msec). Also shown is the
relationship between stimulus intensity and the amplitude of the first
response (right y-axis: ). C, The
effects of stimulation intensity on PPD are observed only at shorter
ISIs. The data in the top panel compare the average
response to PPS of the white matter using low and medium stimulation
intensities (see Results). In each slice, a complete ISI series
(from 20 to 2560 msec) was first delivered at low stimulation intensity
( ) and then delivered at medium stimulation intensity ( ). ISIs at
which the effect of stimulation intensity was significant (0.01 level;
see Results) are labeled with an asterisk. The
difference in paired-pulse ratio between the two stimulation
intensities was computed for each ISI in each experiment. The average
results are shown in the bottom panel.
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In neocortical slices, IPSPs typically have a higher threshold than
EPSPs (Sutor and Hablitz, 1989 ; Hwa and Avoli, 1992 ; Ling and Benardo,
1995 ) (although see Porter et al., 2001 ). Thus, the enhanced PPD
observed at higher stimulus intensities might reflect the recruitment
of GABAergic circuits. If so, we would expect greater effects of
stimulus intensity at relatively short ISIs, a time in which inhibitory
mechanisms are most efficacious. To investigate this possibility, we
set out to determine the range of ISIs at which stimulation intensity
preferentially affects PPD. In these experiments we used two
stimulation intensities across a wide range of ISIs (from 20 to 2560 msec). The first series of ISIs was run at a stimulation intensity that
elicited an FP response approximately one-fourth of maximum (0.55 ± 0.02 mV, low intensity); a second series was then run at a stimulus intensity that evoked an FP response between one-half and two-thirds of
maximum (1.66 ± 0.1 mV, medium intensity). The PPD profiles thus
obtained are shown in Figure 5C. At both intensities, PPD was most pronounced at short ISIs, yet still observed at the longest ISI (2560 msec). As expected, a significantly larger degree of depression was obtained with medium stimulation intensity
(F(7,28) = 6.65; p < 0.001). However, the effect of stimulation intensity was clearly
restricted to the shorter end of the ISI range. Indeed, a post
hoc analysis indicated that a significant difference
(p < 0.01) occurred at ISIs <160 msec. Thus,
it appears that the degree of PPD strongly depends on the stimulation
intensity, but only for stimulus pairs with short ISIs. These results
are consistent with the idea that the activation of inhibitory circuits
is a major determinant of PPD observed at short ISIs.
White matter stimulation induces larger PPD than layer
IV stimulation
We have argued that the critical difference in the ability to
induce LTP between WM and layer IV stimulation results from the
activation of different patterns of inhibitory synapses after stimulation of these two sites (Aizenman et al., 1996 ). It was of
interest, therefore, to compare the degree of PPD evoked from these two
sites. Experiments were conducted in which PPS was first applied to the
white matter and then to layer IV in the same slice (Fig.
6). WM and layer IV stimulation evoked
maximal responses of similar amplitude (WM, 2.83 ± 0.15 mV; layer
IV, 3.12 ± 0.16 mV). In each experiment, the stimulus intensity
was finely tuned to match the amplitude of the responses evoked with WM
with those evoked with layer IV stimulation (1.36 ± 0.05 and
1.36 ± 0.06 mV, respectively). Despite this match in FP
amplitude, PPD was consistently and significantly larger
(F(7,72) = 11.24; p < 0.0001) when PPS was applied to the white matter than when PPS was
applied to layer IV. These differences were restricted to the short end of the ISI spectrum (<360 msec). The differences between WM and layer
IV stimulation were reduced when the stimulation intensity was
decreased (Fig. 6B)
(F(7,48) = 1.514; p = 0.16). These results indicate that the site of cortical stimulation is
a strong determinant of the degree of depression obtained at short
ISIs. These results are also consistent with the notion that WM and
layer IV stimulation recruit inhibition differently.

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Figure 6.
White matter stimulation produces larger
paired-pulse depression than layer IV stimulation. A,
Example of responses evoked by a complete ISI series (20-2560 msec)
applied at medium stimulation intensity first to the white matter
(top traces) and subsequently to layer IV (bottom
traces). In each case only the second response is shown.
B, Average results of 37 experiments performed as in
A (the results of 30 of these experiments are also
included in Fig. 3). Plotted in the top panel are the
paired-pulse response ratios obtained with varying ISIs for both white
matter stimulation ( ) and layer IV stimulation ( ). ISIs at which
the effect of stimulation site was significant (0.01 level; see
Results) are labeled with an asterisk. The
difference in paired-pulse ratio between the two stimulation sites was
computed for each ISI in each experiment. The average results are shown
in the bottom panel.
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Developmental changes in PPD
According to the plasticity gate hypothesis, maturation of
inhibition reduces the ability of cortical circuits to relay
high-frequency activity to layers II/III and produces a developmental
reduction in WM III LTP. Consistent with this idea, it has been
reported that PPD increases in the first postnatal weeks (Ramoa and
Sur, 1996 ). It was of interest therefore to determine whether
developmental changes in PPD correlate with changes in WM III LTP.
Thus, we performed an extensive examination of the effects of
paired-pulse stimulation applied to the white matter and layer IV at
two stimulation intensities (low and medium) in slices prepared from
3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, and 8-week-old rats. Time points of particular interest
are the peak of the critical period, which occurs around the third and
fourth week of age, and the end of the critical period, which occurs
after the fifth week of postnatal life. As shown in Figure 7A, white matter stimulation
at medium intensity evokes substantially larger PPD in slices from
6-week-old animals than in slices from 4-week-old animals
(F(7,30) = 9.52; p = 0.001). The differences between the two PPD profiles were statistically
significant at short ISIs: 40, 80, and 160 msec. In contrast to white
matter stimulation, PPD evoked with layer IV stimulation was less
affected by the age of the animal (Fig. 7B), although the
small differences between the two PPD profiles were found to be
statistically significant (F(7,28) = 2.8; p = 0.01). At low stimulation intensity, on the other hand, the effect of age was much less pronounced for both white
matter stimulation (F(7,30) = 0.879;
p = 0.524) and layer IV stimulation
(F(7,28) = 0.516; p = 0.822) (data not shown).

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Figure 7.
Postnatal changes in paired-pulse depression. The
effects of PPS applied to the white matter and to layer IV were
measured for the first 8 weeks of age. A,
B, Comparison of the PPD profiles obtained at two
different ages (4 and 6 weeks) with white matter stimulation
(A) and layer IV stimulation
(B). C, Time course of
developmental changes in PPD evoked with WM stimulation. Plotted
against postnatal age is the average paired-pulse response ratio
obtained with short ISIs (20, 40, 80 msec). The number
of experiments included in the analysis is indicated in
parentheses. D, Developmental changes in
the magnitude of WM III LTP. Plotted is the average change in
response magnitude recorded 20 min after LTP induction at different
postnatal ages [redrawn from Kirkwood et al. (1995) ].
|
|
The developmental changes in PPD evoked with medium intensity
stimulation of the white matter were examined in more detail. As shown
in Figure 7C, PPD evoked with paired pulses of short ISIs
(20, 40, and 80 msec) rapidly increases by the fourth postnatal week
and reaches a stable adult level by the sixth week of age. The
responses evoked at longer ISIs, on the other hand, were not affected by age (data not shown). The rapid developmental increase in
PPD closely matched the developmental reduction in WM III LTP shown
in Figure 7D [replotted from Kirkwood et al. (1995) ]. Together, these results indicate that like the induction of LTP, PPD
evoked from the white matter is strongly regulated by age, whereas PPD
evoked from layer IV is not.
Effects of visual experience on PPD
Like the critical period for visual cortical plasticity, the
developmental decline in WM III LTP can be postponed by rearing animals in the dark. It was important to determine whether dark rearing
also arrests the developmental increase in PPD. Therefore, we compared
the effects of paired-pulse stimulation in slices prepared from
6-week-old animals reared in the dark from birth and animals reared
under a normal light/dark cycle. As shown in Figure
8, dark rearing substantially decreased
the magnitude of PPD evoked with white matter stimulation
(F(7,68) = 15.933; p = 0.0001). As was the case for age, the effects of sensory deprivation were more dramatic at short ISIs and less pronounced when stimulation was applied to layer IV (F(7,41) = 0.612; p = 0.746).

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Figure 8.
Effects of visual deprivation on PPD.
A, PPD profiles obtained in response to WM stimulation
were determined in slices obtained from 5- to 6-week-old rats reared
normally ( ) and those reared in the dark ( ) and animals exposed
for 24 hr to a normal light/dark cycle after dark rearing ( and
dotted lines). B, PPD profiles for layer
IV stimulation in slices obtained from 5- to 6-week-old rats reared
normally ( ) and reared in the dark ( ).
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|
Finally, we also asked whether the effects of visual deprivation could
be reversed and found that the degree of PPD was substantially restored
in animals that after 6 weeks of dark rearing were exposed to a normal
light/dark cycle for a 24 hr period [ANOVA comparing light-reared
animals with dark-reared animals exposed to 24 hr light/dark cycle
(F(7,41) = 0.612; p = 0.746)]. Thus, like the critical period for the induction of visual
cortical plasticity and WM III LTP, the developmental increases in
PPD can be reversibly arrested or reduced by sensory deprivation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Using PPS we confirmed that the relay of excitatory synaptic
transmission from WM to layers II/III is more effective in the visual
cortex of immature animals than in adults. The developmental increase
in WM III PPD correlates with the decline of WM III LTP and the
critical period for ocular dominance plasticity. Furthermore, rearing
animals in the dark reduces this developmental increase in PPD, just as
it delays the ending of the critical period and the decline of WM III LTP. Our results also indicate that WM III PPD results from the
recruitment of intracortical inhibition. Together, these data support
the idea that maturation of intracortical inhibition reduces the
efficiency in which rapid patterns of synaptic activity are relayed to
superficial cortical layers. Such a reduction in the relay of
excitatory synaptic transmission might affect the induction of synaptic
plasticity and might also be important in determining the end of the
critical period.
Mechanisms of PPD in visual cortex
Depression of synaptic responses during repetitive stimulation is
typical of many cortical regions (Markram and Tsodyks, 1996 ; Castro-Alamancos and Connors, 1997 ; Gil et al., 1997 ; Reyes et al.,
1998 ). Our data along with previous studies indicate that recruitment
of intracortical GABAergic inhibition plays a prominent role in this
type of synaptic depression (Ramoa and Sur, 1996 ; Castro-Alamancos and
Connors, 1997 ; Buonomano and Merzenich, 1998 ; Ziakopoulos et al.,
2000 ). Clearly, selective blockade of GABAb receptors reduces and even
eliminates PPD (Ramoa and Sur, 1996 ; Buonomano and Merzenich, 1998 ;
Ziakopoulos et al., 2000 ) (Fig. 3). The role of GABAa receptors has
been studied less, partially because of difficulty in adequately
blocking these receptors without inducing runaway excitation. We
circumvented this problem by demonstrating that partial blockade of
GABAa activation is sufficient to revert PPD into facilitation and by
demonstrating that enhancing GABAa-mediated events increases PPD (Fig.
4). The involvement of inhibition in PPD is also supported by the close
similarity between the temporal profile of the paired-pulse
interactions and the time course of the inhibitory synaptic response
(Fig. 5) (Castro-Alamancos and Connors, 1997 ; Ziakopoulos et al.,
2000 ). Interestingly, the effects of stimulus intensity, stimulation
site (WM vs layer IV), age, and experience on PPD are restricted to
ISIs <640 msec, roughly corresponding to the duration of postsynaptic
inhibition (Figs. 4, 5).
Although our findings suggest a prominent role of GABAergic
circuits in the developmental increase in PPD, changes in the efficacy
of excitatory synaptic transmission cannot be excluded. Short-term
depression as well as facilitation of excitatory synapses may also
contribute to PPD (Markram and Tsodyks, 1996 ; Stratford et al., 1996 ;
Abbott et al., 1997 ; Castro-Alamancos and Connors, 1997 ; Galarreta and
Hestrin, 1998 ; Gil et al., 1999 ; for review, see Thomson 2000 ).
Short-term depression has been demonstrated at synapses with a high
probability of release, such as thalamocortical synapses in layer IV
(Stratford et al., 1996 ). This synaptic depression is thought to be
caused primarily by a transient depletion of neurotransmitter during
repetitive activation (Markram and Tsodyks, 1996 ; Abbott et al., 1997 )
(but see Brody and Yue, 2000 ; Waldeck et al. 2000 ). Such a mechanism
may account for PPD observed at ISIs longer than the duration of the
postsynaptic inhibitory response (>640 msec). Whether changes in
excitatory synaptic transmission play a role in the developmental
increase in visual cortical PPD, particularly at shorter ISIs, remains
unknown. It seems unlikely, however, because in the few cases examined,
paired-pulse ratios for unitary glutamatergic responses switch from
depression to facilitation during development (Reyes and Sakmann,
1999 ). Also, in adult cortex, paired-pulse stimulation at short ISIs
produces facilitation, not depression, when inhibition is reduced
(Castro-Alamancos and Connors, 1997 ) (Fig. 4). Thus, although other
possibilities cannot be ruled out, change in the efficacy or
recruitment (Angulo et al., 1999 ) of synaptic inhibition is the
simplest explanation to account for the regulation of WM III PPD by
age and experience.
PPD was observed under voltage clamp, and it was reduced by
blocking inhibition. Thus recruitment of inhibition appears to reduce
the relay of synaptic activity to layers II/III cells. Activation of
GABA receptors might reduce the relay of excitation in at least two
ways. Presynaptic GABAb receptors on excitatory axon terminals can
reduce glutamate release (Ziakopoulos et al., 2000 ), whereas
postsynaptic GABAa and GABAb receptors can directly reduce excitability
through hyperpolarization and shunting (Buonomano and Merzenich, 1998 ).
The relative contribution of these two mechanisms to PPD remains to be
determined. Another question concerns the cell type involved in
mediating PPD.
GABAergic interneurons are widely diverse in their physiology,
connectivity, and molecular makeup. Fast-spiking parvalbumin-containing cells may be important in controlling PPD because they are the largest
single type of GABAergic cell within cortex, synapsing primarily onto
the soma and proximal dendrites of principal cells (Kawaguchi and
Kubota, 1993 ; Somogyi et al., 1998 ; Gupta et al., 2000 ). Thus they are
likely to exert a powerful influence on the output of excitatory cells.
A final question concerns the laminar location of the inhibitory
control of WM III PPD. We suspect that the locus of this control is
below layers II/III because layer IV III PPD is poorly regulated by
age and experience. A likely site is layer IV, where the density of
inhibitory contacts is highest within neocortex (Micheva and Beaulieu,
1997 ). Furthermore, thalamocortical axons, besides synapsing onto
excitatory stellate cells, also synapse onto layer IV interneurons
(Ahmed et al., 1997 ; Porter et al., 2001 ). Such a feedforward GABAergic
circuit could inhibit the output of stellate cells and hence the relay of activity to layers II/III. Indeed, in barrel cortex, this powerful feedforward inhibition seemingly prevents stellate cells from firing
more than a single action potential in response to incoming thalamic
activity (Brumberg et al., 1999 ). We propose that a similar layer IV
frequency filter might also operate in the visual cortex.
Functional significance
Changes in the relay of thalamocortical activity to layers
II/III has obvious ramifications for the induction of
activity-dependent plasticity in these layers. The close match between
the developmental increase in WM III PPD, the decline of WM III
LTP, and the end of the critical period for ocular dominance plasticity
are very suggestive in this regard. Remarkably, these three processes can be delayed by rearing animals in darkness. Anatomical data indicate
that maturation of inhibition is also postponed by sensory deprivation.
Together, these results are consistent with the notion that increases
in the efficacy of inhibition serve to reduce the induction of
plasticity in layers II/III. It is worth pointing out that although the
plasticity gate hypothesis was initially formulated to account for the
developmental decline in WM II/III LTP, changes in inhibition could
affect other forms of synaptic modification. For example, recent work
suggests that afferent activity, relayed from the deprived eye, drives
mechanisms of synaptic depression in visual cortex that underlie the
ocular dominance shift after monocular deprivation (Rittenhouse et al., 1999 ). Filtering of this afferent activity within layer IV would be
expected to render layers II/III neurons insensitive to monocular deprivation.
Besides restricting the radial propagation of excitation, synaptic
inhibition might also regulate layers II/III plasticity through other
mechanisms. IPSPs decrease not only the firing of action potentials,
but also their backpropagation into the dendrites of pyramidal cells
(Kim et al., 1995 ; Tsubokawa and Ross, 1996 ; Larkum et al., 1999 ).
Recent work suggests that backpropagating spikes are crucial for the
induction of LTP in pyramidal cells (Magee and Johnston, 1997 ).
Furthermore, precise timing between backpropagating spikes and synaptic
activation determines both the sign and magnitude of synaptic change
(Debanne et al., 1994 ; Markram et al., 1997 ). Thus, changes in the
efficacy of inhibition onto layers II/III cells could affect the
induction of plasticity by altering the integrative properties of these
cells. Whether a developmental increase in layers II/III inhibition
reduces plasticity by such a mechanism remains unanswered.
In summary, an increasing body of evidence indicates an important role
of GABAergic circuitry in the timing of the critical period. Studies on
genetically altered mice suggest that intracortical inhibition is
crucial for both the termination and initiation of the critical period.
In GAD 65 ( / ) knockout mice, in which inhibition is constitutively
reduced, a brief epoch of monocular deprivation has no effect unless
inhibition is pharmacologically enhanced (Hensch et al., 1998 ). On the
other hand, in BDNF-overexpressing mice, in which maturation of
inhibition is accelerated, the critical period for monocular
deprivation not only ends earlier, but also starts earlier (Huang et
al., 1999 ). Together, these results suggest that experience-dependent
plasticity occurs within an optimal range of inhibition. Plasticity
will not occur if the balance of inhibition and excitation is below or
above that optimal range (Feldman, 2000 ). Perhaps a minimum of
inhibition is required to differentiate cortical activity produced by
the open and closed eye. Thus, selective reinforcement of open eye
inputs and selective elimination of closed eye inputs might not take
place before the beginning of the maturation of inhibition. On the
other hand, our data also support the idea that postnatal maturation of
inhibition could lead to the closure of the critical period by
restricting both the type and amount of activity that reaches
modifiable synapses in superficial cortical layers.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 28, 2001; revised June 4, 2001; accepted June 20, 2001.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health and the Sloan Foundation. We thank Dr. H. K. Lee for
valuable comments on this manuscript and M. Sullivan for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Alfredo Kirkwood, Mind Brain
Institute, Johns Hopkins University, 338 Krieger Hall, 3400 N. Charles
Street, Baltimore, MD 21218. E-mail:
kirkwood{at}jhu.edu.
 |
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