Adolescent frontal top-down neurons receive heightened local drive to establish adult attentional behavior in mice

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Abstract

Frontal top-down cortical neurons projecting to sensory cortical regions are well-positioned to integrate long-range inputs with local circuitry in frontal cortex to implement top-down attentional control of sensory regions. How adolescence contributes to the maturation of top-down neurons and associated local/long-range input balance, and the establishment of attentional control is poorly understood. Here we combine projection-specific electrophysiological and rabies-mediated input mapping in mice to uncover adolescence as a developmental stage when frontal top-down neurons projecting from the anterior cingulate to visual cortex are highly functionally integrated into local excitatory circuitry and have heightened activity compared to adulthood. Chemogenetic suppression of top-down neuron activity selectively during adolescence, but not later periods, produces long-lasting visual attentional behavior deficits, and results in excessive loss of local excitatory inputs in adulthood. Our study reveals an adolescent sensitive period when top-down neurons integrate local circuits with long-range connectivity to produce attentional behavior.

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Nabel, E. M., Garkun, Y., Koike, H., Sadahiro, M., Liang, A., Norman, K. J., … Morishita, H. (2020). Adolescent frontal top-down neurons receive heightened local drive to establish adult attentional behavior in mice. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17787-0

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