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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1159-1165
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department Experimental Neurophysiology, Istituto Nazionale Neurologico, 20133 Milan, Italy; and 2Institute for Signal Processing, Medical University of Lübeck, 23569 Lubeck, Germany
Biella, Gerardo,
Laura Uva,
Ulrich G. Hofmann, and
Marco De
Curtis.
Associative Interactions Within the Superficial Layers of the
Entorhinal Cortex of the Guinea Pig. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1159-1165, 2002. Associative fiber systems
in the entorhinal cortex (EC) have been extensively studied in
different mammals with tracing techniques. The largest contingent of
intra-EC cortico-cortical fibers runs in the superficial layers and is
distributed predominantly within longitudinal cortical bands. We
studied the patterns of intrinsic EC connectivity in the in vitro
isolated guinea pig brain preparation by performing current-source
density analysis of field potential laminar profiles recorded with
multi-channel silicon probes. The response pattern evoked by
stimulation of the lateral olfactory tract was utilized to identify the
lateral (l-EC) and medial (m-EC) entorhinal cortex. Stimulation of the
deep layers did not evoke consistent responses. Local stimulation of
the superficial layers in different portions of the EC induced an
early, possibly direct response restricted to layer II-III in the
close proximity to the stimulating electrode, followed by a late
potential in the superficial layer I, that propagated at distance with
a progressively increasing latency. The monosynaptic nature of the
delayed response was verified by applying a pairing test. The results
demonstrated that stimulation in the rostral-medial part of the EC
generated activity restricted to the rostral pole of the l-EC,
stimulation of the m-EC induced an associative activation that
propagated rostrocaudally within the m-EC, stimulation of the caudal
pole of the m-EC induced an additional response directed laterally, and
stimulation of the lateral band of the EC determined a prominent longitudinal propagation of neuronal activity, but also induced associative potentials that propagated medially. The results are in
partial agreement with the general picture derived from the anatomical
studies performed in different species. Even though the largest
associative interactions between superficial layers are restricted
within either the m-EC or the l-EC, both rostral and caudal stimuli in
the EC region close to the rhinal sulcus induced activity that
propagated across the border between l- and m-EC.
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