Selected Publications
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Circuit
dynamics and neural coding in the locust olfactory system
Vivek Jayaraman and Gilles Laurent
In L.R. Squire (Ed.),
The New Encyclopedia of Neuroscience,
Elsevier Science, Oxford, UK (in press)
Genetically encoded optical indicators hold
the promise of enabling non-invasive monitoring of activity in
identified neurons in behaving organisms. However, the interpretation
of images of brain activity produced using such sensors is not
straightforward. Several recent studies of sensory coding used G-CaMP
1.3-a calcium sensor-as an indicator of neural activity; some of these
studies characterized the imaged neurons as having narrow tuning
curves, a conclusion not always supported by parallel
electrophysiological studies. To better understand the possible cause
of these conflicting results, we performed simultaneous in vivo
2-photon imaging and electrophysiological recording of G-CaMP 1.3
expressing neurons in the antennal lobe of intact fruitflies. We find
that G-CaMP has a relatively high threshold, that its signal often
fails to capture spiking response kinetics, and that it can miss even
high instantaneous rates of activity if those are not sustained. While
G-CaMP can be misleading, it is clearly useful for the identification
of promising neural targets: when electrical activity is well above the
sensor's detection threshold, its signal is fairly well correlated with
mean firing rate and G-CaMP does not appear to alter the responses of
neurons that express it significantly. The methods we present should
enable any genetically encoded sensor, activator or silencer to be
evaluated in an intact neural circuit in vivo in Drosophila.
Encoding and Decoding of Overlapping Odor Sequences
Bede M. Broome*, Vivek Jayaraman* and Gilles Laurent
Neuron, 51, 2005
Odors evoke complex responses in locust
antennal lobe projection neurons (PNs)-the mitral cell analogs. These
patterns evolve over hundreds of milliseconds and contain information
about odor identity and concentration. In nature, animals often
encounter many odorants in short temporal succession. We explored the
effects of such conditions by presenting two different odors with
variable intervening delays. PN ensemble representations tracked
stimulus changes and, in some delay conditions, reached states that
corresponded neither to the representation of either odor alone nor to
the static mixture of the two. We then recorded from Kenyon cells
(KCs), the PNs' targets. Their responses were consistent with the PN
population's behavior: in some conditions, KCs were recruited that did
not fire during single-odor or mixture stimuli. Thus, PN population
dynamics are history dependent, and responses of individual KCs are
consistent with piecewise temporal decoding of PN output over large
sections of the PN population.
Intensity versus identity coding in an olfactory system
Mark Stopfer*, Vivek Jayaraman*, and Gilles Laurent
Neuron, 39, 2003
We examined the encoding and decoding of
odor identity and intensity by neurons in the antennal lobe and the
mushroom body, first and second relays, respectively, of the locust
olfactory system. Increased odor concentration led to changes in the
firing patterns of individual antennal lobe projection neurons (PNs),
similar to those caused by changes in odor identity, thus potentially
confounding representations for identity and concentration. However,
when these time-varying responses were examined across many PNs,
concentration-specific patterns clustered by identity, resolving the
apparent confound. This is because PN ensemble representations changed
relatively continuously over a range of concentrations of each odorant.
The PNs' targets in the mushroom body-Kenyon cells (KCs)-had sparse
identity-specific responses with diverse degrees of concentration
invariance. The tuning of KCs to identity and concentration and the
patterning of their responses are consistent with piecewise decoding of
their PN inputs over oscillation-cycle length epochs.
* Equal contributors