Neurometabolic coupling in cerebral cortex reflects synaptic more than spiking
activity.
Citation Info
A Viswanathan and RD Freeman
Neurometabolic coupling in cerebral cortex reflects synaptic more than spiking
activity.
Nature Neuroscience. 10: 1308-12
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Abstract
In noninvasive neuroimaging, neural activity is inferred from local fluctuations
in deoxyhemoglobin. A fundamental question of functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) is whether the inferred neural activity is driven primarily by synaptic
or spiking activity. The answer is critical for the interpretation of the blood
oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal in fMRI. Here, we have used well-established
visual-system circuitry to create a stimulus that elicits synaptic activity without
associated spike discharge. In colocalized recordings of neural and metabolic
activity in cat primary visual cortex, we observed strong coupling between local
field potentials (LFPs) and changes in tissue oxygen concentration in the absence
of spikes. These results imply that the BOLD signal is more closely coupled to
synaptic activity.