Published September 12, 2022
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Layer 5 of cortex innervates the thalamic reticular nucleus in mice
- 1. University of Chicago
Description
Neurons in the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) are a primary source of inhibition to the dorsal thalamus and, as they are innervated in part by the cortex, are a means of corticothalamic regulation. Previously, cortical inputs to the TRN were thought to originate solely from layer 6 (L6), but we recently reported the presence of putative synaptic terminals from layer 5 (L5) neurons in multiple cortical areas in the TRN [J. A. Prasad, B. J. Carroll, S. M. Sherman, J. Neurosci. 40, 5785–5796 (2020)]. Here, we demonstrate with electron microscopy that L5 terminals from multiple cortical regions make bona fide synapses in the TRN. We further use light microscopy to localize these synapses relative to recently described TRN subdivisions and show that L5 terminals target the edges of the somatosensory TRN, where neurons reciprocally connect to higher-order thalamus, and that L5 terminals are scarce in the core of the TRN, where neurons reciprocally connect to first-order thalamus. In contrast, L6 terminals densely innervate both edge and core subregions and are smaller than those from L5. These data suggest that a sparse but potent input from L5 neurons of multiple cortical regions to the TRN may yield transreticular inhibition targeted to higher-order thalamus.
Data availability
Single electron microscopy images of labeled synapses and confocal stacks of multicolor fluorescence data have been deposited in https://github.com/carrolletal/carroll2021-L5-TRN-data- (32). Anonymized electron and light micrograph data have been deposited in https://github.com/carrolletal/carroll2021-L5-TRN-data- (32).
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carroll-et-al-2022-layer-5-of-cortex-innervates-the-thalamic-reticular-nucleus-in-mice.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1073/pnas.2205209119
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:10433