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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 2001, 21(5):1663-1675
Organization of Olivocerebellar Activity in the Absence of
Excitatory Glutamatergic Input
Eric J.
Lang
Department of Physiology and Neuroscience, New York University,
School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016
 |
ABSTRACT |
The olivocerebellar system has been proposed to function as a
timing device for motor coordination in which inferior olivary neurons
act as coupled oscillators that spontaneously generate rhythmic and
synchronous activity. However, the inferior olive receives excitatory
afferents, which can also drive the activity of these neurons. The
extent to which the olivocerebellar system can intrinsically generate
synchronous activity and olivary neurons act as neuronal oscillators
has not been determined. To investigate this issue, multiple electrode
recordings of complex spike (CS) activity were obtained from 236 crus
2a Purkinje cells in anesthetized rats. Intraolivary injections of the
glutamate antagonists 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione or
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-nitro-2,3-dioxo-benzo[f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide disodium were made, and the resulting changes in CS activity were determined. Loss of evoked CS responses to motor cortex stimulation or
perioral tactile stimulation was used to measure the efficacy of the
block. Block of glutamatergic input decreased the average CS firing
rate by ~50% but did not abolish spontaneous CS activity. The
remaining CS activity was significantly more rhythmic than that in
control. The patterns of synchrony were similar to those found in
control conditions (i.e., synchronous CSs primarily occurred among
Purkinje cells located within the same ~250-µm-wide rostrocaudally oriented cortical strip); however, this normal banding pattern was
enhanced. These changes in CS activity were not observed with vehicle
injections. The results suggest that excitatory afferent activity
disrupts olivary oscillations and support the hypotheses that olivary
neurons are capable of acting as neuronal oscillators and that
synchronous CS activity results from electrotonic coupling of olivary neurons.
Key words:
olivocerebellar; synchrony; oscillation; complex spike; inferior olive; CNQX; NBQX
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Studies of the olivocerebellar
system over the past several decades have demonstrated that this system
is capable of generating rhythmic and synchronous complex spike (CS)
activity in cerebellar Purkinje cells. Such CS activity has now been
demonstrated in both anesthetized and awake, behaving animals of
several different species (Bell and Kawasaki, 1972
; Llinás and
Sasaki, 1989
; Sasaki et al., 1989
; Welsh et al., 1995
; Wylie et al.,
1995
; Pellerin et al., 1997
; Lang et al., 1999
) and is central to a
proposed role for the olivocerebellar system in motor coordination
(Llinás, 1991
).
Anatomical and physiological studies of the inferior olive (IO) have
suggested that the mechanisms for generating rhythmic and synchronous
olivocerebellar activity are intrinsic to the IO. Inferior olivary
neurons are electrotonically coupled by numerous gap junctions,
providing a potential mechanism for synchronous CS activity
(Llinás et al., 1974
; Sotelo et al., 1974
; de Zeeuw et al.,
1989
). Moreover, in vitro studies have demonstrated that IO
neurons have a complement of membrane conductances that, in conjunction
with the electrotonic coupling of IO neurons, support spontaneous
subthreshold oscillatory activity, which could underlie the rhythmicity
of CS activity (Llinás and Yarom, 1981a
,b
, 1986
; Benardo and
Foster, 1986
; Bleasel and Pettigrew, 1992
; Bal and McCormick, 1997
).
However, the characteristics of oscillatory activity of IO neurons
under in vitro conditions differ in some aspects
(oscillation frequency and regularity) from those of CS activity in the
intact animal, and despite the high density of gap junctions throughout
the IO, synchronous CS activity tends to occur only among small groups
of Purkinje cells.
These differences between the in vivo and in
vitro results suggest that the patterns of synchronous and
rhythmic CS activity reflect not only the intrinsic properties of IO
neurons but also the activity of IO afferents. It has been shown
previously that inhibitory GABAergic afferents play an important role
in modulating these patterns (Llinás and Sasaki, 1989
; Lang et
al., 1996
). The role of excitatory glutamatergic afferents in
modulating CS rhythmicity and synchrony has yet to be investigated.
However, it is likely that they too play an important role in shaping
the patterns of olivocerebellar activity because the IO contains
glutamate receptors (Petralia and Wenthold, 1992
; Ambalavanar et al.,
1998
; Paarmann et al., 2000
) and receives excitatory projections from numerous CNS regions (Provini et al., 1968
; Allen et al., 1974
; Oscarsson and Sjölund, 1974
; Sasaki et al., 1977
; Jeneskog,
1981a
,b
, 1987
). Thus, the present experiments were undertaken to
investigate the role of excitatory glutamatergic afferent activity in
modulating CS activity and, in particular, to determine whether IO
neurons are capable of acting as true neuronal oscillators as
hypothesized for their role in motor coordination (Llinás,
1991
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgery
Extracellular recordings of CS activity were obtained from eight
female Sprague Dawley rats (250-300 gm). The rats were initially anesthetized with ketamine (100 mg/kg, i.p.), xylazine (8 mg/kg, i.p.),
and atropine (0.4 mg/kg, i.p.). In seven animals supplemental doses of
ketamine (6 mg/kg, i.v.) and xylazine (0.4 mg/kg, i.v.) were given
every 30 min starting 2-3 hr after the initial dose or as needed to
maintain a deep level of anesthesia. In one animal, supplemental
anesthesia was applied continuously through the intravenous line at a
rate of ~64 µg/min for ketamine and ~1 µg/min for xylazine. The
rectal temperature was maintained at 37°C by an electric heating pad.
The multiple electrode technique used in the present experiments has
been described in detail previously (Sasaki et al., 1989
; Sugihara et
al., 1993
). In brief, after anesthetization the animal was placed in a
stereotaxic apparatus, and the occipital bone and dura were removed to
expose the dorsal surface of the cerebellum and medulla. A
silicon-rubber platform was then cemented in place over crus 2a. Each
microelectrode was individually inserted, by the use of a piezoelectric
micromanipulator (Burleigh), through the platform into the
molecular layer of the cerebellum until CS activity could be recorded.
The electrode was then released from the manipulator and held in place
by the platform. Successive electrodes were inserted until a
rectangular array of 8-10 rostrocaudal columns and 4-6 mediolateral
rows, with an interelectrode distance of 250 µm, was completed. The
microelectrodes were implanted to depths of 70-100 µm below the
cortical surface. At these depths CS activity is readily observed, but
simple spike activity is not (simple spike activity typically can be
detected starting at depths of 120-150 µm), thereby allowing the
isolated recording of CS activity. After electrode implantation, the
threshold for each recording channel was individually set to detect the
CS activity. To ensure that only CS activity was detected throughout
the recording session, the activity of all electrodes was continuously
monitored by the use of a light-emitting diode (LED) panel and
oscilloscope. The LED panel consisted of a rectangular array containing
one LED for each electrode. Spike activity that crossed the voltage threshold for detection activated the LED corresponding to that electrode. Thus, changes in the activity level of any cell that might
occur, such as an increase in baseline noise levels in that channel or
the appearance of simple spike activity if the electrode position
changed, were immediately detectable as changes in the activity level
of the corresponding LED and could then be investigated directly using
the oscilloscope. Cells showing such noise or simple spike
contamination were eliminated from the data set. Such cells represented
only 2% of the cells (5 cells out of 236).
After placement of the recording electrodes, an injection pipette,
filled with Ringer's solution, was lowered from the dorsal surface of
the medulla to the IO. The correct localization of the pipette tip to
the rostral IO was determined by the appearance of IO multiunit
activity that was correlated with the CS activity of crus 2a. The
location of the injection pipette was also confirmed histologically
(see Fig. 1B).
In some (n = 2) experiments, a bipolar stimulation
electrode was inserted ~1 mm into the motor cortex (2 mm anterior and
1 mm lateral to bregma). The evoked CS responses to motor cortical stimuli (200 µsec pulse; 0.5-1.5 mA) were used as an independent measure of the efficacy of the intraolivary injections in blocking excitatory input to the olivocerebellar system. In other experiments (n = 4), tactile stimulation of the perioral region was
used to evoke CS responses and measure the efficacy of the injections. Tactile stimuli were delivered by the use of a stylus (~1-mm-diameter tip) that was glued to a small audio speaker driven by an amplifier.
Recording and injection procedure
Extracellular recordings of CS activity were obtained with glass
microelectrodes with a tip diameter of 2-5 µm (~5
M
) containing a 1:1 solution of glycerol and 2 M saline. Each session began by obtaining a 20 min baseline
recording of spontaneous CS activity. Next, CS responses evoked by
stimulation of the motor cortex or perioral region of the face were
measured. After recording of the evoked responses, an intraolivary
injection was initiated, and the spontaneous and evoked CS activities
were recorded.
The procedure for performing pressure injections was modified
somewhat from that used previously (Lang et al., 1996
, 1997
). Here,
pressure injections were made using a microdialysis pump (CMA-100; CMA
MicroDialysis, Acton, MA) connected to the injection pipette via
polyethylene tubing. Continuous injections were made using flow rates
of 0.15-0.25 µl/min. Injection solutions contained one of the
following: Ringer's solution, Ringer's solution + 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX; Research
Biochemicals-Sigma; 200 µM), or Ringer's solution + 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-nitro-2,3-dioxo-benzo[f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide disodium (NBQX; Research Biochemicals-Sigma; 200 µM). The
Ringer's solution contained (in mM): 126 NaCl, 26 NaHCO3, 3 KCl, 1.2 KH2PO4, 1.6 MgSO4, 2 CaCl2, 5 HEPES,
and 15 dextrose.
Histology
After completion of the recording sessions, the injection
pipette was filled with alcian blue solution (10 mg/ml in saline), and
a small amount (~0.3 µl) was injected to mark the tip position. The
animal was then perfused intracardially with 0.9% saline followed by
10% formalin. The dissected brain was immersed in 10% formalin overnight followed by 30% sucrose formalin for at least 2 d.
Parasagittal or coronal 60 µm sections were cut with a freezing
microtome and counterstained with cresyl violet.
Multichannel recording system
The basic multichannel recording system that was used has been
described previously (Sugihara et al., 1993
). Briefly, CS signals from
all recording channels were converted to
transistor-transistor-logic pulses, stored on videocassette
recorder tape, and captured onto a Pentium II personal computer (Dell)
with a 1 msec intersampling period per channel using a digital
input-output board (National Instruments). Data analyses were
performed using custom-made programs written in Fortran or within the
IGOR (WaveMetrics) programming environment.
Data analysis
Calculation of correlation coefficients was performed according
to previously developed methods (Gerstein and Kiang, 1960
; Sasaki et
al., 1989
). The spike train of a cell is represented by the function
X(i), where i represents the time step
(i = 1, 2, ... , N) and
X(i) = 1 if the onset of a CS occurred in
the ith time step and otherwise
X(i) = 0. Y(i) is
defined the same as X(i) but represents the spike
train of a second cell. The correlation coefficient
C(t) is then calculated using the standard
formula for determining a correlation coefficient:
where:
and t represents the time lag between compared times
of the spike trains.
Analysis of oscillatory properties. Autocorrelation
histograms were constructed for CS spike trains of single Purkinje
cells with time bins of 5 or 10 msec. The oscillation frequency was taken as the reciprocal of the latency of the first peak in the autocorrelogram, whereas the strength of the oscillation was quantified using several measures, including the number of peaks in the
autocorrelogram, the height of the first peak with respect to the total
number of firings, and a rhythm index (RI). The RI used here is similar to that used by Sugihara et al. (1995)
. First, the average level of the
autocorrelogram between 50 and 1000 msec was calculated. Next, the SD
of activity about the mean level was measured at time lags of
2000-2500 msec at which oscillatory activity was largely absent and
random fluctuations dominated the autocorrelograms. To be recognized,
peaks and valleys in the autocorrelogram had to be greater than ±1 SD
from the average level of the histogram from 50 to 1000 msec, or the
difference between a successive peak and valley had to exceed 2 SDs.
Furthermore, the successive peaks had to occur at intervals equal to
the latency of the first peak ±10 msec, whereas the valley after a
peak had to occur at a latency from the preceding peak that was equal
to half the latency of the first peak ±10 msec. The search for peaks
was terminated with the first failure to find a significant peak. The
RI was then defined by the following formula:
in which ai and
bi are equal to the absolute values of the
autocorrelation coefficients of the significant peaks
(ai) and valleys
(bi) in the autocorrelogram. These
coefficients are calculated using the formula for
C(t) with X(i) = Y(i) and t equal to the latencies of
the peaks ai and troughs
bi. The greater the RI the tighter or
stronger was the oscillatory activity. In the autocorrelograms that had
no recognizable peaks and valleys, a value of zero was given to the RI.
In these cases, or when the RI was <0.01, the autocorrelation was
regarded as nonoscillatory, and the oscillation frequency was not determined.
Analysis of synchrony. The degree of synchronous CS activity
was measured by calculating the zero-time cross-correlation coefficient C(0), using the equation for C(t) with
t = 0. As a second measure of synchrony, the number of
synchronous spikes between two cells was expressed as a percentage of
the total number of spikes in the reference cell. In both methods, the
time step i used for the synchrony analysis was 1 msec, and
thus synchronous activity is defined as spikes initiating within 1 msec
of each other. It should also be noted that although the
cross-correlation coefficients of cell pairs displaying synchronized CS
activity are small in absolute terms [with C(0) mostly
ranging from 0.01 to 0.30], these values are statistically highly
significant, because they are one to two orders of magnitude greater
than that expected by chance (Sugihara et al., 1993
) and have a
nonrandom spatial distribution. Furthermore, the possibility of
spurious correlations because of the rhythmic nature of CS activity and
the finiteness of our data set is unlikely, because calculation of
cross-correlation coefficients between cell pairs in which the
interspike intervals from one of the spike trains have been randomized
yields correlations one to two orders of magnitude smaller than those
observed here (Lang et al., 1996
).
Estimation of ketamine concentration in the brain
Interpretation of the present results rests in part on the
assumption that NMDA-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission within the IO was absent. Several lines of evidence (described in Results) indicate that this was the case. One of these lines is that the anesthetic ketamine is an NMDA antagonist (Ebert et al., 1997
). To
determine whether during the experiment the ketamine levels in the
brain were actually high enough to ensure blockade of NMDA receptors
(at least 20-100 µM) (Ebert et al., 1997
), the
concentration of ketamine was estimated as follows.
After an initial intraperitoneal injection of ketamine, the anesthetic
level was maintained in most experiments by bolus intravenous injections of the anesthetics. These bolus injections resulted in 1.5 mg of ketamine entering the blood every 30 min. The amount of ketamine
in the blood at time t can then be estimated from the
following equation:
where Xt
1 is the amount of ketamine in the blood
at the time of the previous injection,
t = 30 min,
and kf and ks are the initial and terminal time constants, respectively, for the disappearance of ketamine from the plasma. Ketamine concentration in the blood after intravenous injection initially falls rapidly with a
half-life of t1/2 = 17 min, giving a
kf of 0.039, and then falls more slowly
with a t1/2 = 186 min and a
ks = 0.0038 (Clements and Nimmo, 1981
). To
obtain the minimum amount of ketamine at steady-state, we can subtract
Xt
1 from both sides of the equation
and set the difference Xt
Xt
1 = 0:
Solving for X with
t = 30 min
gives:
Using the given values of kf and
ks yields
Xsteady-state = 4.32 mg. Female
Sprague Dawley rats contain ~63 ml of blood/kg [Schalm et al.
(1975)
, their Table 1]. Therefore, 250 gm rats will contain 15.75 ml
of blood, giving a steady-state ketamine (molecular weight = 274)
blood concentration of 1001 µM.
In one experiment, intravenous anesthesia was given in a continuous
manner using a microdialysis pump (CMA-102; CMA MicroDialysis). Ketamine dissolved in saline was injected at a constant rate of 51 µg/min, so that the amount (1.53 mg) of ketamine delivered in 30 min
was similar to that delivered by the bolus injections. Assuming that
the fast decay decreases the effective amount of ketamine delivered to
15.83 µg/min
(=51e
0.039*30),
the steady-state amount of ketamine in the blood may be estimated by:
Using the values of the time constants above, the blood
concentration of ketamine would be 1013 µM, similar to
the concentrations achieved by the bolus injections and constant in
value through time.
Measurements of relative blood and brain concentrations of ketamine in
Sprague Dawley rats after intravenous injections show that brain
concentrations are six- to sevenfold higher than those of blood (Cohen
et al., 1973
). Thus, the concentrations of ketamine in the brain in the
present experiments are estimated to have been in the range of 6-8
mM.
 |
RESULTS |
The present experiments investigated the role of excitatory
glutamatergic input to the IO in modulating the firing rate,
rhythmicity, and synchronization of olivocerebellar activity by using
simultaneous recordings of CS activity and performing microinjections
of non-NMDA glutamate blockers into the IO. In total, multiple
electrode recordings of CS activity were obtained from 236 crus 2a
Purkinje cells in eight Sprague Dawley rats (range, 22-36
cells/animal). However, 21 (9%) of these cells were "lost" during
the recording sessions and were excluded from the analyses. The CS
activity of the remaining 215 cells formed the database for the
results described below. These CSs displayed a characteristic
multipeaked waveform (Fig. 1A, inset, Spontaneous)
and under control conditions had an average firing rate of 1.02 ± 0.04 Hz (mean ± SE), typical for CS activity. Intraolivary
injections of Ringer's solution were performed in three animals
(n = 79 cells), CNQX injections were performed in four
animals (n = 98 cells), and NBQX injections were made
in three animals (n = 93 cells). The results of CNQX
and NBQX injections were virtually identical and were pooled for
analysis purposes.

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Figure 1.
Block of stimulus-evoked olivocerebellar activity
by intraolivary injection of glutamate antagonists. A,
Extracellular recording of Purkinje cell responses to motor cortical
stimuli. In the control condition, motor cortical stimuli (1.5 mA pulse
of 200 µsec) evoked an initial triphasic field potential (*) followed
by a CS response (**). After injection of NBQX, the CS response is
abolished. Responses to 10 stimuli are overlapped in each condition.
Inset, Seven overlapped spontaneous CSs demonstrating
the similarity in duration and waveform to the evoked CS activity.
B, Contrast-enhanced 60-µm-thick coronal section of
brainstem counterstained with cresyl violet showing an injection site
in the rostral medial portion of the IO. The injection site was marked
by a pressure injection of alcian blue dye at the conclusion of the
experiment (dark spots within the IO). C,
Peristimulus histograms of Purkinje cell activity (same cell shown in
A) evoked by motor cortical stimulation.
D, Peristimulus histogram of multiunit recording of IO
activity from the same control condition shown in C.
Histograms in C and D were compiled from
responses to 300 stimuli. E, Peristimulus histograms
showing CS responses of two cells to brief jabs applied to the upper
lip with a stylus before (Control) and after
(NBQX) intraolivary injection of NBQX. Histograms
were generated from the CS responses during 600 trials (intertrial
period was 1 sec). Bin size equals 2 msec.
|
|
Glutamate antagonists block CS responses evoked by motor cortex or
perioral stimulation
Stimulation of the vibrissal region of the contralateral motor
cortex evoked CS activity in crus 2a Purkinje cells. The CS responses
typically occurred at latencies from 13 to 25 msec and were sometimes
preceded by a triphasic field potential. In the example shown in Figure
1A, Control, the stimulus artifact was followed by an
initial triphasic field potential at a latency of ~7 msec (indicated
by *) and a CS response (indicated by **) at a latency of ~15 msec.
The short latency of the initial field precludes its being related to
climbing fiber activity. This fact is demonstrated by the histograms in
Figure 1, C and D, which plot the latencies of
the onsets of simultaneously recorded responses to motor cortical
stimuli (300 shocks at 0.5 Hz) that were evoked in the cerebellum (Fig.
1C, Control) and IO (Fig. 1D). The
histogram of evoked cerebellar activity under control conditions is
bimodal, with the first peak from 7 to 12 msec and the second one from 15 to 25 msec (Fig. 1C). These peaks correspond in time to
the evoked field potentials and CSs, respectively. In contrast, the histogram of IO responses is unimodal, with responses primarily restricted to a range of 10-22 msec (Fig. 1D).
Because of the 4-5 msec conduction time from the IO to the cerebellar
cortex in rat (Sugihara et al., 1993
), the expected latency of CS
activity in the cerebellar cortex is 14-27 msec, closely matching the
second peak of the control cerebellar histogram. The initial peak in the control histogram (Fig. 1C), being coincident with the
earliest part of the response in the IO, cannot be caused by
olivocerebellar activity. Instead it is presumably caused by the
activation of the mossy fiber-parallel fiber system.
It should be noted that because a simple threshold was used to detect
responses it is possible that the early and late peaks may not be pure
field potential and CS responses, respectively. However, several
considerations indicate that any cross-contamination was minimal.
First, the conduction times between the motor cortex, IO, and
cerebellum described above indicate that evoked CS activity cannot
occur at a short enough latency to contribute to the early peak of the
histograms; nevertheless, some "spontaneous" CSs could occur by
chance at those times. However, because of the typical 1 Hz average
firing rate of CS activity and because the peristimulus histograms were
compiled from 300 trials, the contribution of CS activity to each 2 msec bin would be expected to be ~0.6 responses. The early peaks of
the histograms are 20-40 responses; therefore the contamination
represents an error of 1-2%. The contamination of the second peak by
field potentials was also minimal for several reasons. It can be seen
from the voltage records in Figure 1A that there was
little variation in the latency of the early field and that it
terminated before the earliest time at which CSs occurred. The
identification of the first and second histogram peaks with the field
potentials and CS responses, respectively, is further reinforced by the
differential effect that the toxin injections had on the two peaks as
shown in Figure 1C and as described below.
Injection of the glutamate receptor antagonists CNQX or NBQX into the
rostral medial region of the IO (Fig. 1B), which
gives rise to the projection to crus 2a (Llinás and Sasaki,
1989
), led to the selective disappearance of evoked CS responses as
shown by the extracellular recordings (Fig. 1A,
NBQX) and by the loss of the second peak in the
peristimulus histogram (Fig. 1C, NBQX). Note that the
continued presence of the early field potential indicates that the
stimulation continued to activate the motor cortex effectively. The
results indicate that postsynaptic responses at the final synapse of
descending motor pathways to the IO are mediated by AMPA/kainate-type
glutamate receptors, although a contribution from NMDA receptors cannot
be excluded because of the effects of ketamine anesthesia on these receptors.
Mechanical stimulation of the perioral region is known to evoke CSs in
crus 2a Purkinje cells (Llinás and Sasaki, 1989
). In agreement
with previous reports, tactile stimuli to the perioral region evoked
CSs at latencies of 20-35 msec in crus 2a Purkinje cells (Fig.
1E,
Control). Injection of NBQX to the IO blocked CS responses evoked by tactile stimulation (Fig. 1E).
Thus, the final synapse of this IO afferent pathway also uses
AMPA/kainate-type glutamate receptors.

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Figure 2.
Spontaneous CS activity decreases with
intraolivary CNQX injections. The rate meter was calculated from an
experiment in which 29 cells were simultaneously recorded. The rate
meter shows the single-cell firing rate averaged over the 29 cells for
successive 10 sec intervals during three 20 min recording conditions
(Control, Ringers,
CNQX). Time is continuous within each recording
condition but not between conditions (i.e., there was a 10-15 min
period between each recording condition to exchange the solution of the
injection pipette). Avg, Average.
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|
In addition to demonstrating that major excitatory pathways to the IO
use glutamate receptors, the loss of evoked CS responses was used as an
independent measure of the efficacy of the injection in blocking
excitatory input in five of the seven experiments in which intraolivary
injections of CNQX or NBQX were performed (n = 138 cells). In the remaining two experiments, evoked CS responses were not
elicited, but the injection sites were histologically confirmed to be
within the IO, and the injections produced changes in spontaneous CS
activity that were identical to those in the experiments in which the
loss of evoked CS activity was measured. Although the loss of evoked CS
responses clearly demonstrates that glutamatergic activity was blocked
to the region of the IO that projects to crus 2a, several additional
considerations support the idea that AMPA receptor-mediated activity
was blocked throughout the IO. First, the injection pipette was
positioned in the IO using stereotactic and electrophysiological
criteria, and its location was verified histologically in each
experiment (Fig. 1B). Second, the concentration of
CNQX and NBQX used was 10-fold greater than that needed to block AMPA
receptors in vitro and was the same as that that blocked
glutamatergic miniature postsynaptic potentials in pyramidal neurons
for a 3-mm-diameter region of cortex when injected in a similar manner
(Paré et al., 1997
). Thus, because of this effective
diameter, the pipette tip being located within the IO, and the size of
the IO in rat (2.5 × 1.8 × 0.6 mm) (Paxinos and Watson,
1998
), a complete block of AMPA receptors throughout the IO should have
been achieved.
Furthermore, in the present experiments the block of AMPA receptors by
CNQX or NBQX was taken as equivalent to blocking glutamatergic input,
despite the presence of NMDA receptors in the IO (Petralia et al.,
1994
). Several factors indicate that, under the present experimental
conditions, NMDA receptors are not activated and that it is valid to
equate blocking AMPA receptors to blocking glutamatergic input. First,
evoked CS responses after motor cortical or facial stimulation were
lost after injection of NBQX or CNQX (Fig. 1A),
indicating that blocking AMPA receptors was sufficient to block the
excitatory action of these two glutamatergic afferent pathways and that
NMDA-mediated excitation did not occur in the absence of the initial
depolarization generated by AMPA receptor-mediated currents. This
result is easily explained by the well known voltage dependence of most
NMDA responses because of Mg+2 block of
the channel. It is conceivable that different olivary afferent pathways
use distinct glutamate receptor types and that the two glutamatergic
pathways tested here do not activate NMDA responses; however, there is
no evidence of such parcellation of glutamate receptor subtype by IO
afferents, and the voltage dependence of such channels would still
argue against their activation after AMPA blockade. A second line of
evidence further indicates that NMDA receptors were blocked in the
current experiments; namely, the anesthetic ketamine, a noncompetitive
blocker of NMDA receptors (Martin and Lodge, 1985
), was present in
millimolar concentrations in the brain (see Materials and Methods for
estimation of ketamine concentration), which is several orders of
magnitude greater than the 20-100 µM
concentrations needed to block NMDA receptors (Ebert et al., 1997
).
Finally it should be noted that use of ketamine prevents definitive
determination of the role of NMDA-mediated neurotransmission in shaping
spontaneous CS activity; however, a previous study comparing
spontaneous CS activity patterns in ketamine-xylazine-anesthetized and
awake rats found that they were very similar in these two conditions
(Lang et al., 1999
).
Spontaneous CS activity remains after intraolivary injection of
CNQX or NBQX
To determine whether block of glutamatergic inputs to the IO
affected spontaneous CS activity, the average CS firing rate was
calculated under control conditions and after intraolivary injections
of CNQX (200 µM) or NBQX (200 µM). In seven
experiments in which intraolivary injections of the antagonists were
performed, the average CS firing rate during the 20-min-duration
control period was 1.05 ± 0.04 Hz (n = 191 cells). During intraolivary injection of glutamate receptor blockers,
the average CS firing rate fell to 0.53 ± 0.04 Hz, significantly
less than control levels (t = 9.09; p < 0.001; n = 191 cells; two-sided t test).
Note that the activity from 20 electrodes was lost, and 5 of the losses were caused by electrode malfunction. The reason for the silencing of
CS activity from the remaining 15 (9.5%) electrodes was uncertain, possibly being caused by recording instability, damage to the IO
produced by the injection, or the effect of NBQX or CNQX. During the
Ringer's solution injections only 1-2% of the cells were lost, suggesting that IO damage may account for some of the loss but leaving
open the possibility that a small proportion of IO neurons (<8%) may
be silenced in the absence of excitatory drive. Because of this
uncertainty, the lost cells were excluded from the firing rate
and all subsequent calculations; thus, the true CS firing rate after
block of glutamatergic input is probably slightly lower than 0.53 Hz
(including all 15 lost cells with a firing rate of 0 Hz only drops the
average rate to 0.49 Hz). Nevertheless, it was clear that in the large
majority of cells, spontaneous CS activity, although reduced, was not eliminated.
The ~50% decrease in average firing rate after glutamate receptor
blocker injections can be contrasted with the lack of effect of
intraolivary Ringer's solution injections on average CS firing rate.
In three experiments in which Ringer's solution injections were
performed, the average CS firing rate during the control period was
1.12 ± 0.07 Hz (n = 79 cells), whereas after
injection of Ringer's solution the rate was virtually unchanged
(1.14 ± 0.07 Hz; n = 79 cells). In two of these
experiments, the Ringer's solution injection was followed by injection
of CNQX. The average firing rates for the three conditions in these two
experiments were as follows: control, 1.25 ± 0.09 Hz
(n = 53); Ringer's solution, 1.24 ± 0.10 Hz
(n = 53); and CNQX, 0.74 ± 0.08 (n = 53). The difference between the firing rates in
the control and Ringer's solution conditions was not significant
(t = 0.261; p > 0.25), whereas the
difference between the CNQX condition and either control or Ringer's
solution was significant (CNQX vs control, t = 4.308; p < 0.001; CNQX vs Ringer's solution,
t = 3.939; p < 0.001).
The effects of the drug injections on firing rate were sustained
throughout the recording sessions as can be seen in the rate meters
from one typical experiment in which CS activity was simultaneously recorded from 29 Purkinje cells (Fig. 2). Rate meters from control and
Ringer's solution periods showed similar levels of activity, whereas
during the injection of CNQX, the CS firing rate dropped to
approximately half that of the first two conditions.
Blocking excitatory input to the IO increases the rhythmicity of
complex spike activity
Injection of CNQX or NBQX not only decreased the average CS firing
rate but also dramatically changed its temporal organization. This can
be seen by comparing the raster displays of CS activity in the control
(Fig. 3A) and during injection
of CNQX to the IO (Fig. 3B). In the control period, there
were periods of repetitive firing; however, there were also many
solitary CSs present. In contrast, during the injection of CNQX, CS
activity consisted almost exclusively of bursts of rhythmic activity
separated by periods of near silence.

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Figure 3.
Raster displays of CS activity during control
(A1, A2) and after intraolivary injection
of CNQX (B1, B2). In this experiment, CS
activity was recorded from 29 Purkinje cells simultaneously. Each
horizontal row of tick marks represents the CS activity
from a single Purkinje cell. Note the decrease in overall activity
induced by the injection and the change in the pattern of activity
(A vs B). The details of the shift in
firing pattern induced by the CNQX injection are illustrated by rasters
with an expanded time scale (A2,
B2).
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The effect of glutamate receptor blocker injections on CS rhythmicity
was investigated further by constructing autocorrelograms of CS
activity. Typical examples of autocorrelograms from two cells are shown
in Figure 4. The autocorrelograms of CS
activity during the control period displayed one to two peaks at ~100
msec intervals, indicating the presence of the usual ~10 Hz
rhythmicity of CS activity (Fig. 4A). The changes in
CS rhythmicity after injection of NBQX were immediately apparent in the
autocorrelograms. Compared with control, the peaks of the
autocorrelograms increased in number and height and became narrower
(Fig. 4B). The baseline level of the correlogram also
decreased. Such changes, indicative of an increased rhythmicity coupled
with a decreased average firing rate, were produced by the antagonist
injections in every experiment.

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Figure 4.
Increase in CS rhythmicity after intraolivary NBQX
injection. A, B, Normalized autocorrelograms of the CS
activity recorded from two Purkinje cells during a 20 min control
period (A) and during a 20 min period after block
of glutamatergic input to the inferior olive by NBQX
(B). The central
peaks are truncated in A and
B. C, FFTs of the autocorrelograms
shown in A (top) and B
(bottom) illustrating the shift in oscillation frequency
from 10 Hz in control to 15 Hz after injection of NBQX. Each
column shows histograms and FFTs from one cell.
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To quantify the changes produced by the injection, three measures of
rhythmicity were used: (1) number of significant peaks, (2) height of
the primary peak expressed as a percentage of the total number of
spikes, and (3) the RI. By the use of any of these measures, CS
rhythmicity after block of intraolivary glutamatergic receptors
increased significantly (p < 0.001). The
average number of peaks in the autocorrelograms increased from
1.69 ± 0.07 in control to 2.74 ± 0.10 (t = 8.32; n = 172) during injection of CNQX or NBQX, the
height of the primary peak increased from 4.22 ± 0.19% to
11.93 ± 0.82% (t = 9.11; n = 172), and the RI increased fourfold from 0.0498 ± 0.0030 to
0.2039 ± 0.0164 (t = 9.25; n = 172). The increase in CS rhythmicity indicated by these measures occurred in the vast majority of recorded neurons, with 87% of the
cells having an increased RI during the injections as compared with control.
In addition to increasing CS rhythmicity, blocking glutamate receptors
in the IO produced a shift in the CS oscillation frequency. In control,
the average latency to the first peak in the autocorrelogram was 99.11 msec (n = 161), corresponding to an oscillation
frequency of 10.09 ± 0.17 Hz (n = 161), whereas
during injection of NBQX or CNQX a significantly (t = 5.88; p < 0.001) faster oscillation frequency of
12.21 ± 0.32 Hz (n = 168) was observed, which
corresponded to a first-peak latency of 81.90 msec. Examples of this
shift can be observed in the autocorrelograms (Fig.
4A vs B) and fast Fourier transforms
(FFTs) (Fig. 4C). In these cells, the oscillation frequencies shifted from 9.4 and 10.6 Hz in control to 15.6 and 15.2 Hz
after block of glutamate receptors.
To test whether any of these changes in CS rhythmicity could be
ascribed to the injection process itself, intraolivary injections of
Ringer's solution were performed (n = 3 experiments,
76 cells). These injections produced no significant increases in CS
rhythmicity on any of the measures used. In fact, Ringer's solution
injections actually tended to produce slight decreases in rhythmicity.
In two of these animals (n = 52 cells) the Ringer's
solution injection was followed by injection of CNQX, which produced
the typical increase in CS rhythmicity observed with injection of NBQX
or CNQX. A comparison of the different measures of CS rhythmicity in
the three conditions is shown in Figure
5A, and examples of autocorrelograms from two typical cells under the three conditions are
shown in Figure 5B. The results indicate that Ringer's
solution injections had little to no effect on CS rhythmicity in
comparison with the significant changes produced by the antagonist
injections, indicating that block of IO glutamate receptors was the
cause of the changes in CS rhythmicity.

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Figure 5.
Injections of CNQX but not Ringer's solution
alter CS rhythmicity. A, The characteristics of CS
rhythmicity were quantified using several measures: number of peaks,
peak height, rhythm index, and oscillation frequency. The histograms
compare the mean value ± SEM of these measures in control and
after injection of Ringer's solution and CNQX in the same animals.
Histograms are based on CS activity recorded from 52 Purkinje cells in
two animals. B, Autocorrelograms of CS activity from two
Purkinje cells recorded under all three conditions illustrate the
similarity of the CS activity during injection of Ringer's solution to
that in control conditions and the dramatic change induced by CNQX
injections. Note that the central peaks
are truncated. All recording sessions (Control,
Ringers, CNQX) were 20 min in
duration. Freq, Frequency.
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Distinct oscillatory and nonoscillatory firing modes for complex
spike activity
Examination of the raster displays revealed that under control
conditions CSs may occur either as a series of repetitive spikes with
~100 msec interspike intervals or as isolated spikes (Fig. 3A2), suggesting that the olivocerebellar system may have
two distinct functional states, one state characterized by rhythmic activity with a preferred oscillation frequency of ~10 Hz and a
second state in which random firing predominates. Interestingly, after
intraolivary injections of CNQX or NBQX, primarily the repetitive CS
firing patterns remained (Fig. 3B2), suggesting that these two patterns may correspond to whether olivocerebellar activity is
being generated by intrinsic oscillatory mechanisms or in response to
excitatory afferent activity. This issue was explored by generating interspike interval scatter plots in which x-y pairs were
formed by taking successive interspike intervals of CS activity
[xi, x(i
1)]. Interval plots
for the CS activity from three cells, exemplifying the typical patterns
that were observed, are shown in Figure
6. Under control conditions, the plots of most cells (~80%) displayed four major areas of high density that were separated from each other by regions containing few points that
represent infrequent firing patterns (Fig. 6, left
column).

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Figure 6.
CS activity displays distinct firing modes.
Scatter plots were generated by plotting each interspike interval
(x-axis) against the previous interspike interval
(y-axis). Plots from three cells
(A-C) under control conditions (left
column) and after intraolivary injection of either CNQX or NBQX
(right column) are shown to illustrate the typical
patterns that were observed. All plots were generated from 20 min
recording sessions.
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Points within the high-density region in the lower left corner (Fig. 6,
left column) result from three successive spikes with interspike intervals of 60-110 msec. This region reflects the presence
of 9-16 Hz oscillatory CS activity that was sustained for at least
three cycles and demonstrates that the secondary peaks in the CS
autocorrelograms were not simply the result of doublets at half the
typical oscillation frequency. Thus, IO neurons are capable of
sustained suprathreshold oscillatory activity and not just doublets.
With regard to the regularity of the oscillation, it is important to
note that the lower left high-density region was circularly shaped for
all cells, indicating that the oscillation frequency may vary within a
limited range during individual repetitive firing sequences (an
elliptic shape, with its major axis aligned along the 45° diagonal,
would have indicated a fixed oscillation frequency during any one sequence).
The points comprising the high-density region of the upper right corner
(Fig. 6, left column) result from three spikes at relatively
long interspike intervals on the order of 1 sec. Both the circular
shape of this region and its large diameter (~40 times that of the
lower left corner region) indicate a relatively random firing pattern
with an average rate of 1-2 Hz.
The two remaining high-density zones can be thought of as transitional
zones between the first two zones. That is, the firing patterns of each
consist of a pair of spikes with an ~100 msec interval either
followed (Fig. 6, left column, lower right) or preceded
(upper left) by a long interspike interval. In summary, the
olivocerebellar system appears to have two functional states characterized by two distinct firing patterns: oscillatory (at ~10
Hz) and random (at 1-2 Hz).
Intraolivary injections of CNQX or NBQX dramatically changed the
interspike interval plots of most cells (Fig. 6, right
column). In all cases, there were fewer points for an
identical-length recording period, reflecting the lower average firing
rates after the injection. However, the major change was in the
differentially greater loss of points from the upper right corner
region, reflecting a selective decrease in the random activity pattern.
In some cases, this region was virtually eliminated (Fig.
6B, compare left, right columns). Moreover, the points comprising the oscillatory
region became more tightly clustered and were centered on the inner
boundary that this region displayed under control conditions. After the block of glutamatergic inputs, the oscillatory region of ~17% of the
cells contained several subclusters (Fig.
6C, right column), indicative of specific preferred oscillatory frequencies. This phenomenon probably reflects the discrete jumps in the duration of the
calcium spike of IO neurons (Crill, 1970
; Llinás and Yarom, 1986
). The subclustering was not clearly observed in the plots from CS
activity under control conditions.

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Figure 7.
Spatial organization of CS synchrony.
A, B, Spatial distribution of CS
synchrony with regard to reference cell M, as measured by
cross-correlation coefficients (A) and by the
percentage of synchronous spikes of cell M with each of the other
simultaneously recorded cells (B). In each case
(correlation coefficients, percentages) the positions of the
circles represent the relative positions of the
recording electrodes on crus 2a. The area of each circle
is proportional to the degree of synchrony between cell M and the cell
located at that position. Scale at bottom right of
figure gives calibration for both measures. C, The
average level of synchronization between cell M and other cells plotted
as a function of the mediolateral separation between the cells. Bin
size equaled 1 msec for all analyses, and session duration was 20 min.
Correl. Coeff., Correlation coefficient;
Mediolat., mediolateral.
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Complex spike synchrony during CNQX or NBQX injections into the
inferior olive
Complex spike synchrony has been hypothesized to be caused by the
electrotonic coupling of IO neurons via gap junctions (Llinás et
al., 1974
). However, it is also possible that synchronous CS activity
is the result of synchronous excitatory input to the IO. To investigate
this possibility, the effect of intraolivary injections of CNQX and
NBQX on the spatial distribution of synchrony was investigated.
The basic spatial distribution of CS synchrony under control conditions
is shown in Figure 7. In these plots the relative locations of the
recording electrodes are represented by circles whose
areas are proportional to the amount of synchronous CS
activity between the cell at each of the positions and the reference
cell M, and synchronous is defined as the onsets of CSs in two cells occurring within 1 msec of each other. Synchronous CS activity displayed a rostrocaudal banding pattern. That is, cells within the
same parasagittal strip tended to have the highest level of synchronization, and for cells located in different parasagittal planes, the level of synchronization fell off as a function of the
mediolateral distance between the cells, consistent with previous reports (Sasaki et al., 1989
; Sugihara et al., 1993
). This organization was observed whether CS synchrony was measured using cross-correlation coefficients (Fig. 7A) or percentages (synchronous spikes
between cell M and the compared cell per spikes of cell M) (Fig.
7B). In general, because of the similarity of CS firing
rates between cells, the two measures of synchrony agreed quite well
(Fig. 7C). Because of the agreement of the two measures and
the fact that the correlation coefficient measure allows the
relationship between the cells of each cell pair to be characterized by
a single value, this measure of synchrony will be used for the
remainder of the paper.
The results from an experiment in which CS activity was recorded from
29 Purkinje cells simultaneously are shown in Figure 8. In control conditions, the CS activity
of cell M was more strongly synchronized with the CS activity of cells
located within a narrow (250-µm-wide), rostrocaudally oriented strip
of cortex than with the CS activity of cells located outside of this
band (Fig. 8A). Injection of Ringer's solution to
the IO produced virtually no change in the pattern of synchronous CS
activity, indicating that the injection procedure itself did not cause
alterations in the pattern of synchrony (Fig. 8B).
Intraolivary injection of CNQX did not eliminate CS synchrony (Fig.
8C), as would be expected if the synchrony derived from
synchronous afferent activity to the IO. Instead the pattern of CS
synchrony remained similarly organized to that of the control and
Ringer's solution conditions. However, subtle changes in the synchrony
distribution could be observed; namely, the synchronization of
neighboring cells was generally increased, whereas that of more widely
separated cells was decreased, from control levels (Fig.
8A,C).

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Figure 8.
Complex spike synchrony persists after
intraolivary CNQX injections. Spatial maps of synchronous CS activity
with respect to cell M in control (A) and during
injection of Ringer's solution (B) and CNQX
(C) to the inferior olive. Circles
represent the positions of the recording electrodes on crus 2a. The
area of each circle is proportional to the synchrony
(i.e., zero-time cross-correlation coefficient) between the CS activity
of the cell located at that position and the CS activity of cell M. Time bin for analysis was 1 msec. Recording periods were 20 min for
each condition. Scale at bottom gives calibration for
A-C.
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Similar results were obtained on average regardless of the particular
reference cell used to generate the synchrony maps. As shown in Figure
9, A and B,
intraolivary injections of CNQX or NBQX tended to increase the CS
synchrony of cells located at small mediolateral separation distances
(<500 µm) and/or decrease the CS synchrony of cells more widely
separated (
500 µm). In contrast, injections of Ringer's solution
to the IO did not change the distribution of CS synchrony (Fig.
9C). The effects of the injections on the synchrony
distribution are most clearly seen by plotting the difference in
cross-correlation values between the two conditions as a function of
mediolateral distance between the cells, as shown for these experiments
in Figure 9, A2, B2, and C2. Similar
results were obtained in all the experiments as shown by the plots in
Figure 9D, where the average difference in synchrony in
control and in CNQX or NBQX (Fig. 9D1) or Ringer's solution
(Fig. 9D2) is plotted for all cell pairs in all experiments as a function of the mediolateral distance between the cells of the
pair (CNQX or NBQX, n = 1992 pairs; Ringer's solution,
n = 601 pairs). The increase in synchrony after CNQX or
NBQX injections between cells with separation distances of 0-250 µm
was statistically significant (t = 3.57;
p < 0.0005; n = 580 pairs; one-sided
paired t test) as was the decrease in synchrony for cells
separated by
500 µm (t = 3.50; p < 0.0005; n = 1412 pairs; one-sided paired t
test). Differences in synchrony between Ringer's solution and control
conditions were not significant, with the synchrony for closely spaced
cells (
250 µm) actually decreasing slightly after the Ringer's
solution injections (mediolateral separation
250 µm,
t =
1.72; n = 186; mediolateral
separation
500 µm, t = 1.27; n = 415).

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Figure 9.
Effect of CNQX or NBQX injections on the spatial
distribution of CS synchrony. A1, B1, C1, The average
level of CS synchrony plotted as a function of the mediolateral
separation distance between cell pairs for three experiments in which
NBQX (A1), CNQX (B1), or Ringer's
solution (C1) was injected into the inferior olive. The
plots were generated by calculating the level of synchrony (zero-time
cross-correlation coefficient) for all cell pairs and then sorting the
pairs according to the mediolateral distance separating the cells.
A2, B2, C2, Plots of the corresponding differences in
synchrony between the two conditions in each experiment.
D1, Plots of synchrony differences between the CNQX or
NBQX condition and control as a function of mediolateral separation for
all cells in seven experiments. D2, Same as D1 for
synchrony differences between Ringer's solution and control
conditions. Error bars are SEM. Time bin for analysis was 1 msec.
Recording periods were 20 min for each condition. ML,
Mediolateral.
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Complex spike synchrony during oscillatory and
nonoscillatory activity
The fact that the CNQX or NBQX injections both enhanced CS
rhythmicity and modified the spatial distribution of CS synchrony suggested that the two aspects of CS activity may covary under control
conditions. Thus, the activity of each cell was divided into
oscillatory and nonoscillatory periods. Oscillatory periods were
defined as the times during which the interspike intervals fell within
the range of 70-135 msec (7.4-14.3 Hz), and nonoscillatory periods
were defined as the times when the cell fired with interspike intervals
of 800-10,000 msec (1.25-0.1 Hz). The cross-correlations of each cell
with the other simultaneously recorded cells were then calculated for
these two periods. In the four experiments (n = 120 cells, 3530 cell pairs) in which this analysis was performed, the
average level of synchrony of a cell with other cells more than doubled
during its oscillatory periods (0.0281 ± 0.0010) as compared with
its nonoscillatory periods (0.0121 ± 0.0005), a statistically
significant increase (t = 13.8; p < 0.001). Moreover, comparison of the spatial distribution of CS
synchrony during oscillatory and nonoscillatory activity showed that
the major increase in synchrony occurred among cells with small
mediolateral separation distances. This is demonstrated by Figure
10, which shows the synchrony of the
activity of cell M with that of each of the 35 other simultaneously
recorded cells while cell M displayed either nonoscillatory (Fig.
10A) or oscillatory (Fig. 10B)
activity. This fact is further demonstrated by plotting the average
synchrony with cell M as a function of the mediolateral separation
between the cells (Fig. 10C). This selective increase in
synchronization during oscillatory activity was the typical pattern
that was observed, as is shown by the plot of synchrony as a function
of mediolateral separation for all cell pairs in this experiment during
oscillatory and nonoscillatory activity (Fig. 10D).
Thus, during oscillatory activity, whether induced by block of
glutamatergic input to the IO or occurring spontaneously, the banding
pattern of CS synchrony is enhanced.

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Figure 10.
Enhancement of the banding pattern of synchronous
CS activity during rhythmic firing. A, B,
Spatial pattern of CS synchrony with regard to cell M while cell M was
displaying nonoscillatory (A) and oscillatory
(B) CS activity. Note the preferential increase
in synchronization for cells located close to cell M. Scale at
bottom right of figure gives calibration for
A and B. C,
The average level of synchrony between cell M and the other cells
plotted as a function of the mediolateral separation distance between
cell M and the compared cell for the periods when cell M displayed
oscillatory (open circles) and nonoscillatory
(filled circles) CS activity. D,
Plot of average level of synchrony as a function of mediolateral
separation between the cells in each pair. The average was obtained by
considering all possible cell pairs. Error bars are SEM.
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DISCUSSION |
The present experiments investigated the role of excitatory
glutamatergic inputs to the IO in modulating olivocerebellar activity. By using multiple electrode recording of CS activity and
microinjections of the glutamate receptor blockers CNQX or NBQX into
the IO, it was demonstrated that major excitatory projections to the IO
use glutamate receptors and that the olivocerebellar system can
generate spontaneous CS activity that is both synchronized and
oscillatory in the absence of glutamatergic excitatory input. In
addition, the results suggest that excitatory input to the IO acts to
disrupt the rhythmicity of CS activity and modifies the spatial
distribution of CS synchrony in a manner that is complementary to that
of inhibitory inputs.
Glutamate receptors mediate excitatory drive to the
inferior olive
Electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that excitatory
responses of the olivocerebellar system can be evoked from areas
throughout the neuraxis (Provini et al., 1968
; Allen et al., 1974
;
Oscarsson and Sjölund, 1974
; Sasaki et al., 1975
, 1977
; Jeneskog,
1981a
,b
, 1987
). Immunohistochemical studies have provided evidence of
glutamate receptor subunits throughout the IO (Petralia and Wenthold,
1992
; Ambalavanar et al., 1998
; Paarmann et al., 2000
), suggesting that
these excitatory responses could be mediated by glutamate. The present
results provide direct evidence that this is the case for descending
pathways originating in the motor cortex and for pathways conveying
sensory information from the face.
Rhythmic complex spike activity in the absence of excitatory input
to the inferior olive
Some theories of olivocerebellar function imply that
olivocerebellar activity is primarily driven by afferent activity. For example, olivocerebellar discharges have been postulated to signal unexpected sensory events during movement as a result of activity in
spino-olivary pathways (Miller and Oscarsson, 1970
; Oscarsson, 1980
) or
to carry signals related to the unconditioned stimulus in
associative-learning paradigms (Thompson and Krupa, 1994
). In contrast,
other investigators have favored a theory in which the olivocerebellar
system plays a role in the timing of motor outputs, a role that,
although not excluding activation of the olivocerebellar system by
afferent activity, focuses on the intrinsic ability of this system to
generate oscillatory activity (Llinás, 1991
; Lang, 1995
). The
present results show that rhythmic CS activity persists after block of
excitatory drive to the IO, supporting the idea of IO neurons
acting as oscillators. Nevertheless, blocking excitatory input did
reduce the CS firing rate by approximately half, which suggests that
some spontaneous CS activity is driven by afferent volleys to the IO.
Although some of this reduction may simply be the result of an
imbalance in the net tonic excitatory and inhibitory drives to the IO
(i.e., with the loss of tonic excitation, inhibitory GABAergic
afferents are unopposed), intraolivary injection of solutions
containing both picrotoxin and NBQX also produces decreased CS firing
rates (E. J. Lang, unpublished observations), suggesting that such
an imbalance does not completely explain the decreased CS firing rate.
Thus, olivocerebellar activity may be derived from both intrinsic
oscillatory mechanisms and external sources.
Interspike interval plots indicate that CS activity displays distinct
firing modes, which may correspond to this dual origin of
olivocerebellar activity. That is, under control conditions CS activity
displayed both oscillatory and nonoscillatory firing patterns, whereas
after block of excitatory inputs primarily the oscillatory activity
remained. Thus, intrinsically derived olivocerebellar activity appears
to be oscillatory, whereas CS activity resulting from excitatory IO
afferents tends to have a more random organization.
Under in vitro conditions IO neurons display spontaneous
subthreshold oscillations in their resting potential (Benardo and Foster, 1986
; Llinás and Yarom, 1986
; Lampl and Yarom, 1993
). These oscillations, which are synchronized across IO cells, could provide the substrate for the synchronous rhythmic CS activity that is
observed in vivo. However, normally CS activity recorded from anesthetized or awake animals displays transient rhythmicity (two
to three cycles) (Bell and Kawasaki, 1972
; Sasaki et al., 1989
; Lang et
al., 1997
, 1999
), whereas the subthreshold oscillations are sustained
for many cycles (Benardo and Foster, 1986
; Llinás and Yarom,
1986
). The present results suggest that this difference may reflect the
disruption of the subthreshold oscillations by excitatory input to the
IO. Indeed, excitatory inputs to the IO are largely absent under slice
conditions in which sustained oscillations are observed, and this
situation is approximated by the glutamate blocker injections in the
present experiments, which also produce sustained oscillatory CS
activity. In agreement with this idea, electrical shocks applied to IO
slices temporarily abolish subthreshold oscillations in IO neurons
(Benardo and Foster, 1986
; Llinás and Yarom, 1986
).
In addition to becoming more sustained, rhythmic CS activity displayed
higher oscillation frequencies after block of glutamatergic neurotransmission. This shift likely reflects a hyperpolarization of IO
neurons because of loss of tonic excitatory input. A similar phenomenon
has been demonstrated in vitro in which the resonant frequencies of IO neurons shifted to higher frequencies when the cells
were hyperpolarized and may be explained by the fact that hyperpolarization of IO neurons decreases activation of dendritic Ca+2 conductances, which in turn shortens
the afterhyperpolarization (Llinás and Yarom, 1986
). These
results are also consistent with, and complementary to, previous
findings that blocking GABAergic inhibition to the IO, and thereby
presumably depolarizing IO neurons, slows the oscillation frequency of
CS activity (Lang et al., 1996
).
Synchronous CS activity in the absence of excitatory input to the
inferior olive
Multiple electrode recordings have demonstrated that spontaneous
CS activity of Purkinje cells within rostrocaudally oriented strips of
cortex is synchronized (Sasaki et al., 1989
; Sugihara et al., 1993
;
Lang et al., 1999
). The basis of this synchronization has been proposed
to be electrotonic coupling of IO neurons via gap junctions that
primarily connect their dendritic spines within structures known as
glomeruli (Llinás, 1974
). Much evidence has been obtained to
demonstrate the coupling of IO neurons (Llinás et al., 1974
;
Sotelo et al., 1974
; Llinás and Yarom, 1981a
; Benardo and Foster,
1986
). Nevertheless, the extent to which synchronous CS activity
results from electrotonic coupling of IO neurons as opposed to
synchronization of excitatory activity in IO afferents has not been
determined previously. Indeed, the latter possibility must be
considered because strong sensory stimuli can evoke synchronous CS
responses. However, the present experiments demonstrate that synchronous CS activity remains after block of excitatory IO afferents. Moreover, the overall level and distribution of CS synchrony after block of glutamatergic input were similar to those under control conditions. Thus, the present results suggest that the synchrony of
spontaneous CS activity is primarily caused by electrotonic coupling of
IO neurons.
Inferior olivary afferents modulate the efficacy of
electrotonic coupling
Despite the IO having one of the highest densities of neuronal gap
junctions in the nervous system (Sotelo et al., 1974
; de Zeeuw et al.,
1995
), synchronous CS activity is normally observed mainly among small
groups of Purkinje cells lying within the same ~250-µm-wide
parasagittal strip of cortex. This limited distribution is thought to
result from modulation of the efficacy of the electrotonic coupling by
afferents that synapse adjacent to the gap junctions within the
glomeruli (Llinás et al., 1974
; Sotelo et al., 1974
). Approximately half of these synapses are GABAergic (de Zeeuw et al.,
1989
) and likely have an important role in determining the distribution
of synchronous CS activity, because eliminating GABAergic activity
within the IO leads to widespread synchronization of CS activity (Lang
et al., 1996
).
Although the neurotransmitters of the remaining intraglomerular
terminals have not been identified, the majority are likely to be
glutamatergic, because terminals containing other transmitters tend to
synapse outside the glomeruli (Wiklund et al., 1981
; King et al., 1984
;
Toonen et al., 1998
). In particular, for the rostral medial accessory
olive, a major source of climbing fibers to crus 2a
(Buisseret-Delmas and Angaut, 1993
), the cells giving rise to the
non-GABAergic intraglomerular terminals are located in the
mesodiencephalon, particularly in the