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J Physiol Volume 553, Number 2, 601-610, December 1, 2003 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.048561
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J Physiol (2003), 553.2, pp. 601-610
© Copyright 2003 D 2003 The Physiological Society
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.048561

Receptive field structure of burst and tonic firing in feline lateral geniculate nucleus

Casto Rivadulla *, Luis Martinez *, Kenneth L. Grieve *† and Javier Cudeiro *

* NEUROcom (Grupo de Neurociencia y Control Motor), Departamento de Medicina and INEF de Galicia, Universidad de A Coruña, Spain and † Behavioural Neuroscience Group, Department of Optometry and Neuroscience, UMIST, Manchester, UK

There are two recognised modes of firing activity in thalamic cells, burst and tonic. A low-threshold (LT) burst (referred to from now on as 'burst') comprises a small number of high-frequency action potentials riding the peak of a LT Ca2+ spike which is preceded by a silent hyperpolarised state > 50 ms. This is traditionally viewed as a sleep-like phenomenon, with a shift to tonic mode at wake-up. However, bursts have also been seen in the wake state and may be a significant feature for full activation of recipient cortical cells. Here we show that for visual stimulation of anaesthetised cats, burst firing is restricted to a reduced area within the receptive field centre of lateral geniculate nucleus cells. Consistently, the receptive field size of all the recorded neurons decreased in size proportionally to the percentage of spikes in bursts versus tonic spikes, an effect that is further demonstrated with pharmacological manipulation. The role of this shrinkage may be distinct from that also seen in sleep-like states and we suggest that this is a mechanism that trades spatial resolution for security of information transfer.



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