grant

Impact of subcortical inputs on frontal cortex via thalamus

Organization ALLEN INSTITUTELocation SEATTLE, UNITED STATESPosted 15 Jan 2022Deadline 31 Dec 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AbbreviationsAnatomic SitesAnatomic structuresAnatomyBehaviorBehavioralBrainBrain Nervous SystemBrain regionCell BodyCell Communication and SignalingCell NucleusCell SignalingCellsCognitiveColorConnector NeuronElectrophysiologyElectrophysiology (science)EncephalonFoundationsGene ExpressionGlobus PallidusGoalsImageIndividualIntercalary NeuronIntercalated NeuronsInterneuronsInternuncial CellInternuncial NeuronIntracellular Communication and SignalingKnowledgeLinkMedialModelingMolecularMotor CortexNerve CellsNerve UnitNeural CellNeurocyteNeuronsNeurophysiology / ElectrophysiologyNucleusPathway interactionsPharmacologyPhysiologicPhysiologicalPhysiologyPopulationPrefrontal CortexPropertyPyramidal CellsRewardsRouteSamplingScienceSignal TransductionSignal Transduction SystemsSignalingSiteSliceSubstantia NigraSubstantia nigra structureSynapsesSynapticTestingThalamic NucleiThalamic structureThalamusVirusWorkbehavior influencebehavior studybehavioral influencebehavioral studybiological signal transductioncell typedensityelectrophysiologicalexperimentexperimental researchexperimental studyexperimentsfrontal cortexfrontal lobegene signaturesgenetic approachgenetic signaturegenetic strategyimagingin vivoneuralneural circuitneural circuitryneural modelneurocircuitryneuronaloptogeneticspallidumpatch sequencingpatch-seqpatchseqpathwayresponsesegregationsensory cortexsynapsesynaptic circuitsynaptic circuitrythalamictooltranscriptomicsvoltage
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Full Description

Summary, Project 3 (Impact of subcortical inputs on frontal cortex via thalamus)
The goal of this project is to elucidate the functional influence of subcortical inputs on the frontal cortex via non-

sensory ('higher-order') thalamus. Each part of the frontal cortex receives inputs from multiple thalamic nuclei,

each of which in turn receives inputs from diverse subcortical brain regions. Our recent work has established

clear motifs for how different thalamic inputs can engage specific populations of pyramidal cells and interneurons

in the frontal cortex. However, we still lack even a basic understanding of how subcortical inputs are organized

in the thalamus, including how they are routed at the level of thalamic nuclei and single thalamocortical (TC)

cells. Here we test the hypothesis that each subcortical input either excites or inhibits a defined subset of TC

cells to engage specific networks in the frontal cortex. In Aim 1, we use electrophysiology to study the

organization and influence of specific subcortical inputs on the thalamus and cortex in the intact brain. This work

leverages new, high-density Neuropixels 2.4 probes that allow dense sampling of TC cell activity across thalamic

nuclei. These experiments will define convergence and divergence rules in the thalamus and determine how

subcortical signals propagate to frontal cortex. In Aim 2, we use brain slice electrophysiology to determine the

properties of subcortical connections onto identified TC cells in the thalamus. We incorporate patch-Seq analysis

to assess gene expression of each recorded neuron, linking processing of subcortical inputs with TC cell type.

This work builds on Projects 1 and 2 and the Molecular Science Core, providing a foundational analysis of

subcortical connections to the thalamus. In Aim 3, we then use voltage imaging in slices to examine how specific

subcortical-thalamic pathways engage distinct networks across the frontal cortex, focusing on medial prefrontal

cortex and motor cortex. Here we use anterograde viruses to conditionally express optogenetic tools in TC cells

that then engage specific networks in the frontal cortex. We also employ mFISH to assess the genetic signatures

of imaged excitatory and inhibitory cells, again allowing for sub-populations to be determined. Together, our

experiments will establish the organization and properties of connections from subcortical inputs to higher-order

thalamus and in turn the frontal cortex. They will serve as a strong foundation for our behavioral studies in Project

4, and constrain multi-regional models of neural computation developed in Project 5.

Grant Number: 5U19NS123714-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Adam Carter

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