Claustrum modulation drives altered prefrontal cortex dynamics and connectivity

Abstract This study delves into the claustrum’s role in modulating spontaneous and sensory-evoked network activity across cortical regions. Using mesoscale calcium imaging and Gi and Gq DREADDs in anesthetized mice, we show that decreasing claustral activity enhances prefrontal cortical activity, wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ryan Zahacy, Yonglie Ma, Ian R. Winship, Jesse Jackson, Allen W. Chan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024-11-01
Series:Communications Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-07256-5
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Summary:Abstract This study delves into the claustrum’s role in modulating spontaneous and sensory-evoked network activity across cortical regions. Using mesoscale calcium imaging and Gi and Gq DREADDs in anesthetized mice, we show that decreasing claustral activity enhances prefrontal cortical activity, while activation reduces prefrontal cortical activity. This claustrum modulation also caused changes to the brain’s large-scale functional networks, emphasizing the claustrum’s ability to influence long-range functional connectivity in the cortex. Claustrum inhibition increased the local coupling between frontal cortex areas, but reduced the correlation between anterior medial regions and lateral/posterior regions, while also enhancing sensory-evoked responses in the visual cortex. These findings indicate the claustrum can participate in orchestrating neural communication across cortical regions through modulation of prefrontal cortical activity. These insights deepen our understanding of the claustrum’s impact on prefrontal connectivity, large-scale network dynamics, and sensory processing, positioning the claustrum as a key node modulating large-scale cortical dynamics.
ISSN:2399-3642