English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Poster

Beyond the Cortical Column: Structural Organization Principles in Rat Vibrissal Cortex

MPS-Authors
There are no MPG-Authors in the publication available
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Fulltext (public)
There are no public fulltexts stored in PuRe
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Oberlaender, M., Narayanan, R., Egger, R., Meyer, H., Baltruschat, L., Dercksen, V., et al. (2012). Beyond the Cortical Column: Structural Organization Principles in Rat Vibrissal Cortex. Poster presented at 5th INCF Congress of Neuroinformatics (ICNF 2012), München, Germany. doi:10.3389/conf.fninf.2014.08.00052.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0001-9C43-4
Abstract
The cortical column is regarded as an elementary functional unit of the mammalian brain. In the vibrissal cortex of rodents, an anatomical equivalent has been described. The so called barrel columns primarily process the information obtained from a related principal whisker on the animal’s snout. We reconstructed the 3D geometry of the entire rat vibrissal cortex with high precision. We found that the location and orientation of all barrel columns, as well as the 3D layout of the vibrissal cortex was remarkably preserved across animals. In contrast, barrel columns differed substantially within the same animal (e.g., the column volume varied by a factor of 3). To investigate whether the differences in column geometry also result in structural differences at the network level, we determined (i) the number and 3D distribution of excitatory/inhibitory neurons in the entire vibrissal cortex, (ii) the number and 3D distribution of neurons in the entire vibrissal thalamus, (iii) the number and distribution of cell types in cortex and thalamus and (iv) reconstructed the 3D dendrite and axon innervation patterns of 160 neurons from all cell types. First, we found that the neuron density was similar in each barrel column, resulting in 3-fold differences in numbers of excitatory and inhibitory neurons between columns. Second, the number of thalamic input neurons correlated with the number of neurons per column (i.e., the ratio of whisker-specific neurons in thalamus and the respective column was constant). Third, the vibrissal cortex and thalamus contained 9 and 4 types of excitatory neurons, respectively. Forth, dendrite and axon morphologies were characteristic for each cell type. Further, neurons of most cell types projected the majority of their axon to surrounding cortical columns. Finally, we created a standardized 3D model of the entire vibrissal cortex and combined it with the 3D distributions of excitatory/inhibitory neurons and the 3D reconstructions of dendrites and axons from all cell types. Using this anatomically realistic model of the vibrissal cortex, we estimated the number and 3D distribution of synaptic contacts between approximately 600,000 neurons. The resultant average ‘connectome’ of the vibrissal cortex reveals structural organization principles beyond individual cortical columns and allows for interpretation or simulation of functional data, measured in vivo.