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J Neurophysiol 102: 1026-1039, 2009. First published May 13, 2009; doi:10.1152/jn.91051.2008
0022-3077/09 $8.00
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Synaptic Interactions Between Forelimb-Related Motor Cortex Neurons in Behaving Primates

W. S. Smith and E. E. Fetz

Department of Physiology and Biophysics and Washington National Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

Submitted 18 September 2008; accepted in final form 11 May 2009

We investigated the synaptic interactions between neighboring motor cortex cells in monkeys generating isometric ramp-and-hold torques about the wrist. For pairs of cortical cells the response patterns were determined in response-aligned averages and their synaptic interactions were identified by cross-correlation histograms. Cross-correlograms were compiled for 215 cell pairs and 84 (39%) showed significant features. The most frequently found feature (65/84 = 77%) was a central peak, straddling the origin and representing a source of common synaptic input to both cells. One third of these also had superimposed lagged peaks, indicative of a serial excitatory connection. Pure lagged peaks and lagged troughs, indicative of serial excitatory or inhibitory linkages, respectively, both occurred in 5% of the correlograms with features. A central trough appeared in 13% of the correlograms. The magnitude of the synaptic linkage was measured as the normalized area of the correlogram feature. Plotting the strength of synaptic interaction against response similarity during alternating wrist torques revealed a positive relationship for the correlated cell pairs. A linear fit yielded a positive slope: the pairs with excitatory interactions tended to covary more often than countervary. This linear fit had a positive offset, reflecting a tendency for both covarying and countervarying cells to have excitatory common input. Plotting the cortical location of the cell pairs showed that the strongest interactions occurred between cells separated by <400 microns. The correlational linkages between cells of different cortical layers showed a large proportion of common input to cells in layer V.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: E. E. Fetz, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-7290 (E-mail: fetz{at}u.washington.edu)







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