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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2003, 23(7):2961
Cell Type-Specific Circuits of Cortical Layer IV Spiny Neurons
Dirk
Schubert1,
Rolf
Kötter1, 2,
Karl
Zilles1, 3,
Heiko J.
Luhmann4, and
Jochen F.
Staiger1
1 C. & O. Vogt Institute for Brain Research,
2 Institute of Morphological Endocrinology and
Histochemistry, University of Duesseldorf, D-40001 Duesseldorf,
Germany, 3 Institute of Medicine, Research Centre Juelich,
D-52425 Juelich, Germany, and 4 Institute of Physiology and
Pathophysiology, University of Mainz, D-55128 Mainz, Germany
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ABSTRACT |
Sensory signal processing in cortical layer IV involves two major
morphological classes of excitatory neurons: spiny stellate and
pyramidal cells. It is essentially unknown how these two cell types are integrated into intracortical networks and whether they play
different roles in cortical signal processing. We mapped their
cell-specific intracortical afferents in rat somatosensory cortex
through a combination of whole-cell patch-clamp recordings and caged
glutamate photolysis. Spiny stellate cells received monosynaptic
excitation and inhibition originating almost exclusively from neurons
located within the same barrel. Pyramidal cells, by contrast, displayed
additional excitatory inputs from nongranular layers and from
neighboring barrels. Their inhibitory inputs originated, as for spiny
stellate cells, mainly from neurons located in the same barrel. These
results indicate that spiny stellate cells act predominantly as local
signal processors within a single barrel, whereas pyramidal cells
globally integrate horizontal and top-down information within a
functional column and between neighboring barrels.
Key words:
barrel cortex; layer IV; pyramidal cell; spiny
stellate cell; functional connectivity; excitatory inputs; inhibitory
inputs; morphology; electrophysiology; biocytin; caged glutamate; somatosensory; slices
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Introduction |
In the primary somatosensory cortex
of rodents, layer IV neurons are arranged in discrete clusters
(barrels) (Woolsey and Van der Loos, 1970 ) that receive a
topographically organized input from their respective principal whisker
on the contralateral side of the face (via the whisker-to-barrel
pathway) (Jones and Diamond, 1995 ). From layer IV the information is
transmitted within a functional barrel-related column predominantly to
layers II/III and subsequently to infragranular layers (Armstrong-James
et al., 1992 ; Petersen and Sakmann, 2001 ). In addition to these
vertical intracolumnar pathways, neuronal activity is transmitted via
horizontal projections in supragranular (Feldmeyer et al., 2002 ) as
well as infragranular layers (Feldmeyer and Sakmann, 2000 ; Schubert et
al., 2001a ) to the neighboring barrel-related column. Such
transcolumnar interactions may be a primary mechanism for the
generation of multiwhisker receptive fields (Simons, 1978 ; Simons and
Carvell, 1989 ; Armstrong-James et al., 1992 ).
Circuits within and between barrel-related columns are not well
understood. Neuroanatomical (Kim and Ebner, 1999 ) as well as recent
in vitro and in vivo electrophysiological studies
(Goldreich et al., 1999 ; Laaris et al., 2000 ; Petersen and Sakmann,
2000 ) seem to indicate that a direct barrel-to-barrel pathway does not exist to a significant extent. Thus, thalamocortical connections (Petersen and Diamond, 2000 ) as well as horizontal interactions in
supragranular and infragranular layers (Petersen and Sakmann, 2001 )
were suggested to assemble multiwhisker receptive fields.
Another unresolved question is in which way the morphologically
heterogeneous excitatory neurons in layer IV, i.e., spiny stellate
cells and pyramidal cells, contribute to intracortical circuits. These
two main morphological groups coexist not only in layer IV of the rat
barrel cortex (Simons and Woolsey, 1984 ) but also in other sensory
cortices of various species (Jones, 1975 ; Tarczy-Hornoch et al., 1998 ;
Smith and Populin, 2001 ; Yabuta et al., 2001 ). A recent in
vivo study indicates that, in fact, spiny stellate and pyramidal
cells within barrels show different response dynamics after whisker
deflection (Brecht and Sakmann, 2002 ).
To map the intracolumnar and transcolumnar synaptic inputs to
barrel-related neurons, we performed whole-cell recordings from visually identified and biocytin-labeled spiny neurons in layer IV of
rat barrel cortex in vitro. Presynaptic neurons were
stimulated by focal caged glutamate photolysis (Callaway and Katz,
1993 ; Kötter et al., 1998 ; Sawatari and Callaway, 2000 ; Staiger
et al., 2000 ; Schubert et al., 2001a ), and the resulting monosynaptic postsynaptic potentials were used to construct detailed maps of the
functional synaptic inputs onto layer IV spiny stellate and pyramidal neurons.
Our data indicate that layer IV barrels do not entirely function as an
array of independent parallel processors (Goldreich et al., 1999 ) but
rather possess cell type-specific circuits allowing significant
intracolumnar feedback and even direct barrel-to-barrel interactions.
Feedback may allow a top-down modulation of layer IV circuits during
sensory learning (Diamond et al., 1994 ; Harris et al., 2001 ), whereas
horizontal pathways may provide a mechanism for an early integration of
multiple discrete sensory signals into a unified neuronal percept
(Gilbert et al., 1996 ).
Part of this study has been published previously in abstract form
(Schubert et al., 2001b ).
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Materials and Methods |
Slice preparation and chemicals. Coronal slices from
rat somatosensory cortex containing the barrel cortex (Paxinos and
Watson, 1998 ) were prepared by standard methods (Schubert et al.,
2001a ). Male Wistar rats (postnatal days 18-22) were deeply
anesthetized with enflurane and decapitated. Blocks of tissue
containing the barrel cortex were excised, quickly removed from the
skull, and stored in ice-cold artificial CSF (ACSF) oxygenated
with carbogen (95% O2/5%
CO2). Normal ACSF consisted of (in
mM): 124 NaCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, 1.6 CaCl2, 1.8 MgCl2, 3 KCl, 10 glucose, at pH 7.4. To block
synaptic transmission, modified ACSF containing 0.2 mM CaCl2 and 4 mM MgSO4 (low
Ca2+/high
Mg2+ ACSF) was used. The tissue block was
glued to the chilled platform of a Vibratome (Series 1000; TPI, St
Louis, MO) and submerged in ice-cold carbogenated ACSF. Slices of 300 µm nominal thickness were cut and incised along the midline to
separate the hemispheres. The slices were stored in an incubation
chamber containing carbogenated ACSF at 34°C for at least 1 hr.
Slices were then transferred to the recording chamber and submerged in
ACSF at a flow rate of ~1 ml/min at 32°C. Caged glutamate
[L-glutamic acid,
-( -carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl)ester; Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR] was dissolved in ACSF and added to the circulating ACSF,
resulting in a 1 mM concentration.
Identification of layer IV spiny neurons. Slices were placed
in a fixed-stage submerged chamber under an upright microscope (Axioskop FS; Carl Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany) fitted
with a 2.5× and 40× water-immersed objective (40×/0.75 W;
Olympus, Hamburg, Germany) (Staiger et al., 2000 ). The
barrel field was visualized at low magnification under bright-field
conditions (see Fig. 1), and a target region within a layer IV barrel
was selected for cellular recording. Individual neurons were visually
identified at 40× magnification using infrared enhanced quarter-field illumination.
Electrophysiology. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from
layer IV spiny neurons were performed in current-clamp mode using patch
pipettes (4-6 M ) fabricated from borosilicate glass capillaries (1.5 mm outer diameter, 1.16 mm inner diameter; Science Products, Hofheim, Germany) on a PP-830 puller (Narishige, Tokyo,
Japan). Pipettes were filled with (in mM): 13 KCl, 117 K-gluconate, 10 K-HEPES, 2 Na2ATP, 0.5 NaGTP, 1 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 11 EGTA, and 1% biocytin. After obtaining a stable seal of >1 G , the
whole-cell configuration was achieved by gentle suction. Data were not
corrected for the junction potential. A bipolar tungsten electrode
placed in deep layer VI was used for electrical afferent stimulation (200 µsec, 0.1 Hz).
Scanning of glutamate-evoked activity. The setup and
experimental procedures for photolysis of caged glutamate have been
described previously (Schubert et al., 2001a ). For local stimulation,
UV light pulses from a Xenon arc lamp (TILL Photonics,
Planegg, Germany) were focused on 50 × 50 µm large areas. The
illumination intensity was calibrated by a circular linear-wedge
neutral density filter (Dr = 0.0-2.0)
(Melles Griot, Irvine, CA) to a value that ensured action
potential generation only on perisomatic photostimulation (Schubert et
al., 2001a ). In addition to layer IV spiny neurons (n = 40), also other neurons in layers II/III, IV, V, and VI
(n = 61) were recorded and stimulated at the resting
membrane potential (Vrmp) of the cell.
Action potentials could not be elicited by photostimulation at
distances >100 µm from the soma in any of these control experiments.
While the synaptic connectivity was mapped, the cell was held at a
potential (Vhold) of 60 mV in current-clamp mode to reveal hyperpolarizing inhibitory synaptic inputs. The intrinsic properties of the recorded cells were controlled before and after termination of each map.
Data acquisition and analysis of glutamate-induced activity.
The signals were amplified (SEC-05L; npi-electronics, Tamm,
Germany), filtered at 3 kHz and digitized using an ITC-16 interface
(Instrutech, Port Washington, NY). Data were recorded,
stored, and analyzed with PC-based software (TIDA 4.1 for Windows;
Heka Elektronik, Lambrecht, Germany). After recording,
slices were photographed in the bath chamber to document the topography
of barrel-related columns and layers as well as the position of the
recording and stimulating electrode.
To distinguish between flash-induced activity and spontaneous activity,
integral values of all spontaneous events within a time window of 150 msec were determined for each cell. The highest integral value of
spontaneous activity obtained in 20 control recordings for each cell
was set as the cell-specific activity threshold. These control
recordings were performed directly before mapping in ACSF containing
caged glutamate without preceding photostimulation. Because inhibitory
spontaneous activity was very rare, only integrals of excitatory
spontaneous events were calculated. To identify glutamate-induced
activity, integral values of all excitatory events after
photostimulation in the same time window were calculated. Only activity
that exceeded the cell-specific activity threshold was accepted as a
glutamate-induced response. All integral values of glutamate-induced
responses were corrected by the value of the cell-specific activity threshold.
Glutamate-induced responses were analyzed and superimposed on the
respective sites of the slice photomicrographs. Statistical analysis
was performed using multivariate ANOVA with post hoc pairwise comparisons (Bonferroni corrected) and unpaired two-tailed Student's t test (SPSS 9; SPSS Inc., Chicago,
IL). Data are presented as mean ± SD.
Histological procedures. After recording, slices were fixed
in phosphate-buffered solution containing 4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C
for 24 hr. For visualization of the biocytin-filled neurons, slices
were processed using a previously described protocol (Angulo et al.,
1999 ). To visualize the barrel field, slices were also subjected to
cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. Reconstruction and morphological
analysis of the biocytin-labeled neurons were made using a
Nikon Eclipse 800 (Nikon, Ratingen, Germany)
attached to a computer system (Neurolucida; Microbrightfield Europe,
Magdeburg, Germany). Soma area, number of primary dendrites, number of
dendritic ends, total length of the dendrites, and length of the apical dendrite were determined for all layer IV spiny neurons (see Table 1). Data were not corrected for tissue
shrinkage. The reconstructed cells were superimposed onto the
photomicrograph of the native slice using standard graphics
software.
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Results |
In the present study, a combination of whole-cell patch-clamp
recording, topographic mapping of glutamate evoked activity, and
subsequent morphological somatodendritic reconstruction was used to
investigate the functional connectivity of layer IV spiny neurons in
coronal slices of rat barrel cortex (Fig.
1). All investigated neurons were
localized within a barrel. The dimensions of the respective barrels
were first visually determined in microphotographs of living unstained
slices and then confirmed in the histologically processed cytochrome
oxidase-stained slices (Fig. 1a,b).

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Figure 1.
Experimental setup for whole-cell recording in
layer IV and local caged glutamate photolysis. Photomicrographs of a
coronal slice of the rat somatosensory cortex taken directly after an
experiment with recording and stimulation electrodes (a,
c) and after histological processing (b).
a, Barrel field in the living, unstained slice at low
magnification and the same section after staining for biocytin and
cytochrome oxidase (b). The biocytin-labeled
layer IV spiny stellate cell is shown enlarged in the
inset. c, Position of the recorded layer
IV spiny stellate cell (white dot) and extent of the
region stimulated by local photolysis of caged glutamate
(grid). At 10 sec intervals, 450 fields
of 50 × 50 µm in size were stimulated in sequence covering all
cortical layers and at least two barrel-related columns. White
frames highlight the layer IV barrels located within and near
the investigated area. Roman numerals indicate cortical
layers. Scale bars: a-c, 200 µm;
b, inset, 100 µm.
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Morphological and electrophysiological classification of layer IV
spiny neurons
According to their somatodendritic morphology, we classified the
biocytin-stained layer IV neurons as (1) spiny stellate cells (n = 28; reconstructed, n = 17) and (2)
pyramidal neurons (n = 18, including 8 star pyramidal
cells; reconstructed, n = 11) (Table 1). The basic property of spiny stellate cells was
the confinement of their dendritic tree to layer IV and the absence of
an apical dendrite (Fig. 2a).
Between two and nine primary dendrites emerged from the soma and
bifurcated into several higher-order dendrites. In contrast to spiny
stellate cells, pyramidal neurons possessed an apical dendrite, which
extended out of the barrel into the supragranular layers without
forming an extended terminal tuft (Fig. 2b), and two to five
primary nonapical dendrites emerged from the soma.

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Figure 2.
Morphology and electrophysiology of layer IV spiny
neurons. a, b, Photomicrographs (scale bar, top
panel, 25 µm) and somatodendritic reconstructions (scale bar,
bottom panel, 100 µm) of
biocytin-stained layer IV spiny neurons. The lighter shaded
areas mark the dimensions of the respective barrels.
a, Spiny stellate cell with dendrites showing a
spherical organization restricted to the barrel. b,
Pyramidal cell with apical dendrite reaching layer I and basal
dendrites forming a skirt-like pattern. Action potential firing pattern
(c, d) and correlation of first-ISI
versus second-ISI (e). f, Synaptic
responses of layer IV spiny neurons. Spiny stellate as well as star
pyramidal and pyramidal cells revealed one of the following firing
patterns on injection of a suprathreshold depolarizing current pulse at
resting membrane potential. In regular spiking cells, depolarizing
current evoked a low-frequency train of single action potentials
(c). Intrinsically bursting neurons revealed an
initial high-frequency burst consisting of an action potential followed
by a depolarizing afterpotential with at least two spikes of decreasing
amplitude (d). The initial burst was followed by
a sequence of single action potentials. e, Correlation
of first-ISI versus second-ISI revealed two clusters representing the
two types of action potential firing pattern: IB firing (small cluster
at bottom left) and RS firing (larger cluster at
top right). Data are shown for 46 spiny neurons (28 spiny stellate cells and 18 pyramidal cells). f,
Postsynaptic responses of a spiny neuron to orthodromic electrical
stimulation at different membrane potentials. The stimulus elicited an
action potential and an EPSP followed by a fast
(asterisk) and slow (double asterisk)
IPSP.
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Analysis of the electrophysiological properties of spiny stellate and
pyramidal cells revealed comparable passive intrinsic membrane
properties. However, their active membrane properties revealed two
different types of action potential firing patterns (Table 1). In
agreement with previous studies (Chagnac-Amitai and Connors, 1989 ;
Feldmeyer et al., 1999 ) regular spiking (RS) neurons were found in both
morphologically identified cell classes (Table 1). After injection of
suprathreshold depolarizing current pulses at resting membrane
potential, RS cells fired regular trains of single action potentials
with an average first interspike interval (first-ISI) of 22.9 ± 10.1 msec and a second interspike interval (second-ISI) of 50.4 ± 11.2 msec (n = 22) (Fig. 2c). Intrinsically burst spiking (IB) (Connors and Gutnick, 1990 ) cells, characterized by
an initial high-frequency burst of usually three action potentials (first-ISI, 6.8 ± 0.9 msec; second-ISI, 14.1 ± 7.4 msec;
n = 25) (Fig. 2d) were also identified in
both cell groups. Mean first-ISI as well as second-ISI values were
significantly shorter in IB cells than in RS neurons
(p < 0.01). Correlation of first-ISI with
second-ISI values revealed two clusters for each type of action
potential firing pattern, i.e., RS versus IB (Fig. 2e). However, spiny stellate and pyramidal cells were distributed nearly equally among these clusters, resulting in no correlation between the
morphology of layer IV spiny cells and their intrinsic firing pattern.
Orthodromic stimulation in deep layer VI evoked a strong postsynaptic
inhibition in spiny neurons. In all cells, orthodromic stimulation in
deep layer VI elicited an EPSP, which was followed by a fast IPSP in 26 of 28 cells tested (Fig. 2f, asterisk). In 15 of
28 cells the fast IPSP was also followed by a slow IPSP (Fig.
2f, double asterisk).
Neuronal activity elicited by local photolysis of
caged glutamate
Focal photolysis of caged glutamate induced two types of activity
in the recorded neuron: (1) direct responses caused by activation of
glutamate receptors on the recorded cell and (2) synaptically mediated
responses resulting from the suprathreshold activation of presynaptic
neurons. To differentiate between these two types of responses,
experiments in low Ca2+/high
Mg2+ ACSF were performed (Fig.
3a,b) that blocked
synaptic transmission (n = 3). Under this condition,
direct responses could only be recorded after stimulation of fields,
which were restricted to the region containing the somatodendritic
extensions of the recorded cell. Because of calibration of the UV flash
intensity [for details see Schubert et al. (2001a) ], only stimulation
of perisomatic fields induced a membrane depolarization sufficient to
elicit an action potential (Fig. 3a1). With increasing
distance to the somatic recording site, amplitudes of flash-induced
depolarizations decreased rapidly (Fig. 3a2). These direct
responses followed the photostimulation almost instantaneously (Fig.
3b). Short delay-to-onset times of 0.2-0.8 msec were
observed only on perisomatic stimulation. Stimulation of the remaining
fields containing dendrites elicited responses with delays of 1-2.5
msec.

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Figure 3.
Nonsynaptic and synaptic responses elicited by
focal caged glutamate photolysis. a, Direct postsynaptic
responses recorded at resting membrane potential in ACSF containing 0.2 mM Ca2+/4 mM
Mg2+ to block synaptic transmission.
a1 shows suprathreshold response to perisomatic
stimulation, and a2 illustrates response to stimulation
of distal dendrites. b, Histogram showing delay to onset
of glutamate-induced responses (n = 3 neurons)
recorded in low Ca2+/high Mg2+
bathing solution. Note that all direct postsynaptic events appeared
within the first 3 msec after stimulus. c, Synaptic
responses recorded in ASCF at a holding potential of 60 mV after
local glutamate photolysis in a perisomatic field (c1),
in a remote field containing one or more synaptically connected
excitatory neurons (c2), and in a field containing at
least one synaptically connected inhibitory cell (c3).
d, Delay-to-onset distribution of glutamate-induced
responses (n = 24 neurons) recorded in normal ACSF.
Although direct nonsynaptic responses appeared with a delay 5 msec,
all synaptically mediated PSPs showed delay-to-onset latencies >5
msec.
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In normal ACSF, as for experiments in low
Ca2+/high
Mg2+ solution, only perisomatic
stimulation elicited an action potential (Fig. 3a1,c1). As for other cell types in various
cortical layers (see Materials and Methods), in none of the layer IV
spiny neurons could action potentials be elicited in fields at
distances >100 µm from the soma. In normal ACSF, in addition to
direct responses, synaptically mediated activity was evoked by
stimulation of fields containing presynaptic neurons. Direct responses
and synaptically mediated activity were clearly separated by their
different delay-to-onset times (Fig. 3d). Within the barrel
of the recorded cell, the fastest synaptically mediated responses
occurred after 5 msec after stimulus, whereas the slowest direct
responses occurred at most 5 msec after stimulus.
Excitatory synaptic inputs often consisted of two or more single EPSPs
with amplitudes of 0.5-3 mV (Fig. 3c2). These multiple EPSPs most likely resulted from activation of several presynaptic cells
or of presynaptic IB neurons (Thomson, 1997 ). Because neurons were held
at 60 mV during mapping, IPSPs were detected as hyperpolarizing potentials (Fig. 3c3).
For the topographic mapping of synaptic inputs onto layer IV neurons,
we stimulated 450 different fields of 50 × 50 µm in size
covering an area of all six cortical layers and two neighboring barrel-related columns (Fig. 1c). For quantitative analysis
of the spatial distribution of synaptic inputs onto layer IV spiny neurons, we determined the percentages of fields generating synaptic inputs after photostimulation for each cortical layer and column.
Intracolumnar synaptic inputs onto spiny stellate cells
Spiny stellate cells (n = 14) received the vast
majority of their excitatory synaptic inputs from fields inside the
same barrel (Fig. 4a). On
average, 52 ± 14% of the tested fields in layer IV generated an
excitatory response (Fig. 5a).
In contrast, <4% of the fields in the nongranular layers elicited an
excitatory response. Three of 14 spiny stellate cells did not receive
any excitatory synaptic inputs from outside the same barrel. From the
remaining cells, five did not receive any synaptic inputs from
supragranular layers. Of all nongranular layers, the most consistent
sources for excitatory synaptic inputs onto spiny stellate cells were
layers Va and VI (9 of 13 spiny stellate cells).

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Figure 4.
Topographic maps of functional
connectivity of layer IV spiny neurons. The somatodendritic
reconstruction of a recorded spiny stellate (a)
and a pyramidal cell (b) as well as the
respective topographic maps of their synaptic inputs were superimposed
on the photomicrographs of the native slices. The topographic maps
illustrate integrals of recorded EPSPs within 150 msec after stimulus
(green to red) and fields of
origin for IPSPs (blue). Note that for simplification,
in fields where stimulation evoked EPSPs as well as IPSPs, only the
IPSP is represented (blue). Fields given in
gray were excluded from analysis because of a strong
temporal interaction among direct postsynaptic activation, action
potential generation, and synaptic events. Stimulated fields that did
not induce any response are transparent. The outer black
frames indicate the extent of the investigated area; the
rounded black rectangles highlight the dimensions of the
relevant barrels. Insets show the enlarged cortical area
within the slice (white frame). Action potential firing
patterns on injection of a suprathreshold depolarizing current pulse at
Vrmp are illustrated in a1
and b1. Scale bar, 200 µm.
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Figure 5.
Spatial distribution of synaptic inputs onto layer
IV spiny neurons. a, Percentages of stimulated
presynaptic fields delivering intracolumnar and transcolumnar
excitatory synaptic inputs onto layer IV spiny stellate cells
(black bars, n = 11) and pyramidal
neurons (shaded bars, n = 8).
b, Mean strength of excitatory intracolumnar and
transcolumnar synaptic inputs. c, Percentages of
stimulated presynaptic fields delivering inhibitory synaptic inputs.
Note that in a and c scales for
transcolumnar inputs are enlarged. Data are means ± SD.
Asterisks indicate significant differences between the
two cell groups: *p < 0.05 and
**p < 0.01.
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To quantify the average strength of excitatory inputs originating from
fields in a certain layer or column, we calculated the integral of all
detectable flash-induced EPSPs within a time window of 150 msec after
stimulus for each trace (Fig. 5b). All traces without any
detectable stimulus-related activity were excluded from this
quantification. Most of the excitatory inputs originating from fields
within the respective barrel consisted of multiple high-amplitude EPSPs
(0.19 ± 0.18 mV*sec), indicating extensive and strong
intrabarrel coupling with other excitatory neurons. The average
strength of excitatory inputs from all other layers was significantly
weaker (0.04 ± 0.03 mV*sec; p < 0.01).
All spiny stellate cells received inhibitory inputs that originated
predominantly from the same barrel (Figs. 4a,
5c); however, the percentage of fields in layer IV
delivering inhibitory synaptic inputs was variable. Some spiny stellate
cells received inhibitory inputs from >50% of the fields within their
barrel (n = 2); others received inhibitory inputs from
<10% (n = 5). Additional intracolumnar inhibitory
synaptic inputs originated from lower layer III and layer Va.
Intracolumnar synaptic inputs onto pyramidal cells
In addition to their distinct morphological property of an apical
dendrite, pyramidal cells (n = 10) showed pronounced
differences in their synaptic inputs when compared with spiny stellate
cells. A representative topographic map of functional connectivity of a
layer IV pyramidal cell is shown in Figure 4b. Within the
barrel, 66 ± 15% of the fields delivered EPSPs on stimulation,
indicating strong intrabarrel excitatory interactions. In contrast to
spiny stellate cells, however, all pyramidal neurons received numerous excitatory inputs from nongranular layers of the same column (Fig. 5a). On average, 20% of the fields in nongranular layers
generated excitatory inputs after photostimulation. Especially within
the infragranular layers Vb and VI of the same column, the percentages of fields delivering excitatory inputs onto pyramidal neurons were
significantly higher compared with spiny stellate cells (Vb, p < 0.01; VI, p < 0.01). Regarding
the strength of intracolumnar excitatory inputs, we found no
significant differences between pyramidal and spiny stellate cells
(Fig. 5b). Inhibitory synaptic inputs onto pyramidal
neurons, as in spiny stellate neurons, predominantly originated in
layer IV as well as from lower layer III and layer Va (Figs.
4b, 5c).
Transcolumnar interactions
Transcolumnar synaptic inputs onto layer IV spiny stellate cells
were observed only rarely. Only 2 of 14 spiny stellate neurons received
excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs arising from the neighboring
barrel-related column (Fig.
6a). In contrast, 6 of 10 pyramidal neurons received numerous transcolumnar excitatory inputs.
Representative topographic maps documenting transcolumnar synaptic
inputs are shown in Figure 6, a and b. On
average, pyramidal cells received significantly more excitatory inputs
from all layers of the neighboring column than spiny stellate cells
(layer II/III, p < 0.01; layer IV, p < 0.05; Va, p < 0.05; Vb, p < 0.05;
VI, p < 0.01) (Fig. 5a). However, if
transcolumnar connectivity was present, both cell types received
excitatory synaptic inputs especially from the neighboring barrel.
Photostimulation in the neighboring barrel could induce excitatory
synaptic inputs from up to 20% of the fields. The strength of these
excitatory transcolumnar inputs was similar for both cell types (Fig.
5b). As illustrated in Figure 6c, excitatory
transbarrel inputs usually consisted of multiple EPSPs. However, the
average strength of these synaptic inputs (0.05 ± 0.03 mV*sec)
did not reach the strength of excitatory intrabarrel connections.
Inhibitory synaptic inputs from the neighboring column were altogether
rare but could be observed in two spiny stellate and five pyramidal
cells. These cells received inhibitory inputs mainly from the
neighboring barrel, where 2-5% of the fields generated IPSPs after
photostimulation, as well as occasionally from layer II/III and Vb
(Fig. 5c).

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Figure 6.
Layer IV spiny neurons show direct
barrel-to-barrel interactions. Topographic maps of excitatory and
inhibitory synaptic inputs onto a layer IV spiny stellate cell
(a) and a pyramidal cell
(b). Insets show the enlarged
cortical area within the slice (white frame). Action
potential firing patterns on injection of a suprathreshold depolarizing
current pulse at Vrmp are illustrated in
a1 and b1. c, EPSPs
recorded at Vhold = 60 mV on
stimulation of fields in the neighboring barrel at positions indicated
in a. Scale bar, 200 µm.
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Layer IV neurons receiving transcolumnar synaptic inputs did not show a
preferred location within the barrel. The spatial dimensions of the
proximal dendrites in these neurons were similar to those observed in
layer IV cells receiving no transcolumnar input, indicating that a
different dendritic geometry may not account for the observed interactions.
Does functional connectivity correlate with intrinsic
firing patterns?
In layer V, functional connectivity of excitatory neurons
correlates with the active membrane properties of the cell and its morphology (Schubert et al., 2001a ). In the present study, however, layer IV spiny neurons showed no correlation between functional connectivity and the firing pattern of the cell. Neither within nor
across the two identified morphological groups of layer IV spiny
neurons did IB cells differ significantly from RS cells in terms of
their excitatory or inhibitory functional connectivity (data not shown).
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Discussion |
Using a combination of in vitro whole-cell recordings,
detailed mapping of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs, and morphological reconstruction, we were able to demonstrate a cell type-specific input onto layer IV spiny neurons in rat barrel cortex.
Whereas synaptic inputs onto spiny stellate neurons originate predominantly from the same barrel, layer IV pyramidal neurons receive
additional excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs from supragranular
and infragranular layers of the same barrel column and from the
adjacent barrel (Fig. 7). Our data imply
that spiny stellate and pyramidal neurons in rat barrel cortex can be
differentiated by their distinct intracortical synaptic inputs,
indicating that the somatodendritic structure of a cortical neuron
correlates with a distinct role in intracortical sensory information
processing. In this processing, a strong local component is likely to
be mediated by spiny stellate neurons, whereas pyramidal cells
additionally contribute in a more global manner. The coexistence of
these two cell types in layer IV is not unique for the rat
somatosensory cortex. Other species, including primates, as well as
other sensory cortices also show this feature (Jones, 1975 ;
Tarczy-Hornoch et al., 1998 ; Smith and Populin, 2001 ; Yabuta et al.,
2001 ). Interestingly, a correlation between the morphology of a cell
and its role in cortical signal processing has recently been documented
in the primary visual cortex of macaque monkey as well (Yabuta et al., 2001 ), suggesting that cell type-specific parallel pathways might be a
more general feature of cortical circuitry organization. These findings
promote the idea that columnar circuits possess a common structural
design (Mountcastle, 1997 ). They further suggest that mechanisms of
top-down modulation and horizontal integration contribute to signal
processing in layer IV (Harris et al., 2001 ), as already shown for
feedforward excitation and inhibition (Miller et al., 2001b ).

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Figure 7.
Schematic illustration of excitatory and
inhibitory intracolumnar and transcolumnar synaptic inputs onto layer
IV spiny neurons in rodent barrel cortex. Excitatory synaptic inputs
are shown in gray; inhibitory inputs are shown in
white. The density of synaptic inputs is represented by
the number of arrows (1 gray arrow: 10%
of fields generated EPSPs; 1 white arrow: 5% of fields
generated IPSPs). The average strength of excitatory synaptic inputs is
represented by the thickness of the arrows (thin
arrow: <0.05 mV*sec; medium arrow: 0.05-0.1
mV*sec; thick arrow: >0.1 mV*sec). Although spiny
stellate cells receive predominantly intrabarrel synaptic inputs
(a), layer IV pyramidal neurons are additionally
innervated from supragranular and infragranular layers and from the
neighboring barrel (b).
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Methodological considerations
The method as such was described and discussed in detail in a
previous publication (Schubert et al., 2001a ). The main conclusion is
that monosynaptic inputs to identified neurons are mapped with a
(sub-)laminar resolution by stimulating neurons via photolytic release
of caged glutamate. The fact that we use in vitro
preparations necessitates the caveat that slicing of the brain results
in loss of a substantial proportion of cortical circuitry. However, our goal to describe local columnar and neighboring transcolumnar pathways
should not be compromised significantly, because we and others have
shown previously that a great number of even more distant projections
remain intact (Burkhalter, 1989 ; Staiger et al., 1999 ). Another issue
relates to the possibility that cortical functional connectivity in
adolescent rats, as investigated here, partially represents a
transient, developmental phenomenon. However, previous studies in
somatosensory (Nicolelis et al., 1991 ; Miller et al., 2001a ) and visual
cortex (Borrell and Callaway, 2002 ) indicate that exuberant axonal
connections exist only during the very early stages of ontogenesis and
reach their mature pattern after the first postnatal week. In fact, at
postnatal day 20, the general pattern of synaptic inputs onto spiny
neurons, as revealed in this study, is likely to represent an
adult-like stage of functional connectivity in rat somatosensory cortex
(Nicolelis et al., 1991 ; Miller et al., 2001a ).
Local versus global information processing in layer IV
barrel cortex
Layer IV spiny neurons in rodent barrel cortex are the main target
of thalamocortical afferents originating from neurons in the
ventroposteromedial nucleus (Benshalom and White, 1986 ; Staiger et al., 1996 ). Whether layer IV barrels are interconnected via excitatory and inhibitory pathways (Armstrong-James et al., 1991 ; Fox,
1994 ; Gil et al., 1999 ) or function as an array of independent, parallel processors of afferent information (Goldreich et al., 1999 ;
Kim and Ebner, 1999 ) is highly controversial. Previous extracellular tracing studies in rodent barrel cortex have demonstrated only poor
direct barrel-to-barrel connections, suggesting that layer IV barrels
are essentially isolated from transcolumnar horizontal interactions
(Kim and Ebner, 1999 ). In contrast, in vivo recordings strongly indicate that surround receptive fields of layer IV barrel neurons are predominantly generated intracortically by barrel-to-barrel interactions (Armstrong-James et al., 1991 ; Fox, 2002 ).
We demonstrate that layer IV spiny neurons may act as local or global
processors, depending on their somatodendritic morphology. Although
spiny stellate cells function predominantly in intrabarrel information
processing, layer IV pyramidal neurons also receive transbarrel inputs
and participate directly in translaminar and transcolumnar circuits.
This finding is in good agreement with a recent in vivo
study (Brecht and Sakmann, 2002 ) in which pyramidal cells showed
stronger responses to multiwhisker stimulation than spiny stellate
cells. Support for this conclusion comes also from other previous
experimental studies: ~85% of the excitatory synaptic inputs onto
layer IV spiny stellate cells originate from intracortical sources
(Benshalom and White, 1986 ), predominantly from other spiny stellate
neurons in the same barrel (Feldmeyer et al., 1999 ), indicating that a
local network of spiny stellate cells operates in intrabarrel
information processing and serves to separate the representations of
single whiskers (Petersen and Sakmann, 2001 ). The axonal projection of
layer IV spiny stellate cells in sensory cortex is relatively narrow
and seems to be restricted primarily to a single cortical column
(Harris and Woolsey, 1983 ; Lübke et al., 2000 ). In rat barrel
cortex, short-range axonal connections within a single barrel are
highly reliable, and unitary EPSPs can be sufficiently depolarizing to
elicit an action potential in the postsynaptic cell (Feldmeyer et
al., 1999 ). Our observations on spiny stellate neurons are in good
agreement with these previous reports. More than 80% of the
intracolumnar excitatory inputs onto spiny stellate neurons originated
from adjacent neurons within the same barrel. These intrabarrel
connections represent the strongest synaptic inputs that we observed.
They could be the critical component of circuits extracting the
physical parameters of sensory stimuli encoded by individual sets of
peripheral receptors. The second major intracortical source for
excitatory inputs on spiny neurons in layer IV is known to be layer VI
(Ahmed et al., 1994 ; Zhang and Deschênes, 1997 ). In our
experiments, however, this layer VI to layer IV connection turned out
to be not very prominent in both investigated cells types. This
probably relates to the weak synaptic efficacy of these excitatory
inputs (Tarczy-Hornoch et al., 1999 ).
Spiny stellate cells receive a weaker intracolumnar and transcolumnar
synaptic input, possibly because they lack an apical dendrite.
Morphologically, pyramidal neurons show a more extended and vertically
polarized dendritic tree, which may explain their responses to
intracolumnar inputs from extragranular neurons and transcolumnar
inputs from the neighboring barrel. Layer IV pyramidal neurons might
receive synaptic inputs from neurons located in the neighboring barrel
mostly via axonal connections ascending to supragranular layers.
Thomson and Deuchars (1994) suggested that synaptic connections even
between closely spaced neurons might involve their distal apical
dendrite (Thomson and Deuchars, 1994 ). Recently, Lübke et al.
(2000) demonstrated in rat barrel cortex that the axonal projections of
layer IV (star) pyramidal neurons to supragranular layers fan out in a
clustered manner, and a few of these collaterals innervate adjacent
cortical columns. Postsynaptic targets of this layer IV to layer II/III
projection are small caliber dendritic shafts or spines (Lübke et
al., 2000 ) that could belong to layer IV pyramidal cells. They could be
the critical component of circuits modulating local signal processing with horizontal and top-down information, thus providing the context of
what is perceived by neighboring receptors and processed by hierarchically higher layers or areas. According to our results, top-down information is provided mainly by neurons in the infragranular layers. However, we occasionally found excitatory inputs originating also from the supragranular layers, especially for the layer IV pyramidal cells. The presumably low number of neurons involved in this
layer II/III to layer IV connection may explain why such an interaction
could not yet be revealed in paired recording studies (Feldmeyer et
al., 2002 ; Thomson et al., 2002 ).
Inhibitory synaptic circuits in layer IV are not well defined. A small
percentage (10%) of all inhibitory inputs originated from the
neighboring column (cf. Salin and Prince, 1996 ), and these could
contribute to transbarrel inhibition during cross-whisker stimulation
(Simons and Carvell, 1989 ). More frequent inhibitory synaptic
inputs onto layer IV spiny neurons originated from intracolumnar sources (Salin and Prince, 1996 ), and these inputs may sculpture the
receptive fields of the excitatory neurons or synchronize the activity of neuronal ensembles within a barrel-related column. Under in vivo conditions, the strongest IPSPs are
consistently evoked by the primary vibrissa (Moore and Nelson, 1998 ),
reflecting the prominent intrabarrel inhibition demonstrated in the
present study. Morphological (Kisvárday et al., 1985 ) as well as
electrophysiological (Tarczy-Hornoch et al., 1998 ) studies in cat
visual cortex demonstrated that these local inhibitory synaptic
inputs onto layer IV spiny neurons mainly originate from small basket
cells. In rat barrel cortex, virtually all layer IV GABAergic neurons,
which certainly include a population of basket cells, receive a strong
thalamocortical input and project locally within their own barrel,
thereby generating feedforward inhibition (Porter et al., 2001 ).
Functional implications
Intracortical connections undergo rapid
experience-dependent modifications in their synaptic strength. Altered
sensory experience ["whisker pairing" (Diamond et al., 1993 ) or
"univibrissa rearing" (Fox, 1994 )] induces massive modifications
in the receptive field properties of layer IV cells in adult rat barrel
cortex. These modifications depend to a large degree on intracortical
pathways within and between barrels (Armstrong-James, 1995 ; Fox, 2002 ), most likely with a contribution of long-term potentiation- and long-term depression-like mechanisms (Feldman, 2000 ; Fox, 2002 ). Because layer IV pyramidal neurons are the main target of synaptic inputs from the neighboring barrel, experience-dependent changes in
barrel-to-barrel interactions may be mediated predominantly by changes
in the efficacy of synaptic inputs onto layer IV pyramidal neurons.
These connections were shown to play an important role in
experience-dependent and lesion-induced reorganization at the cortical
level (Armstrong-James et al., 1991 , 1994 ; Finnerty et al., 1999 ; Fox,
2002 ). Subthreshold inputs originating from neighboring barrel-related
columns, together with thalamocortical connections (Petersen and
Diamond, 2000 ), may contribute to receptive field plasticity and
reorganization of cortical maps when intracortical inhibition is
reduced (Moore and Nelson, 1998 ; Moore et al., 1999 ). The proposed
circuits for local sensory signal processing and global integration of
horizontal and top-down information are considered to represent
mechanisms that enable sensory cortices to participate in the formation
of behaviorally relevant memories (Harris et al., 2001 ). An important
goal for further studies remains to show how these cell type-specific
circuits interact and under what behavioral conditions they are used.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 17, 2002; revised Jan. 21, 2003; accepted Jan. 22, 2003.
This study was supported by the C. & O. Vogt-Institut fuer
Hirnforschung GmbH, the "Gertrud Reemtsma Stiftung," and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grants Lu 375/3 to H.J.L. and Sta 431/5-1 to
J.F.S. We thank Ulrich Opfermann-Emmerich for excellent technical assistance and Dr. Ritchie Brown for critically reading this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dirk Schubert, C. & O. Vogt Institute for Brain Research, Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf, P.O. Box 101007, D-40001 Duesseldorf, Germany. E-Mail: schubd{at}uni-duesseldorf.de.
 |
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