The functional characterization of callosal connections

Autor: Maurice Ptito, Franco Lepore, Francisco Aboitiz, Chantal Milleret, Roberto Caminiti, Alexandra Battaglia-Mayer, Kerstin E. Schmidt, Maria G. Knyazeva, Matteo Caleo, Muhamed Barakovic, Mara Fabri, Giorgio M. Innocenti, Carlo Alberto Marzi
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
callosal conduction velocity
callosal disconnection syndromes
Computer science
VM
vertical meridian of the visual field

receptive-field properties
Callosal axon diameter
Callosal conduction velocity
Callosal connections flexibility
Callosal disconnection syndromes
Callosal interhemispheric transfer
Corpus callosum
Review Article
primary auditory-cortex
corpus callosum
AAF
anterior auditory field

EP
evoked potential

Operation mode
EPSP
excitatory post-synaptic potential

Neural Pathways
posterior corpus-callosum
Direct stimulation
Neurons
CPN
callosal projection neuron

callosal connections flexibility
Synaptic interaction
GI
primary gustatory area

General Neuroscience
SC
split-chiasm

Brain
A1
primary auditory cortex

ICoh
interhemispheric EEG coherence

BOLD
blood oxygen level dependent

General theory
Cortical network
DW-MRI
diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging tractography

Excitatory postsynaptic potential
parietal lobule projections
callosal axon diameter
callosal interhemispheric transfer
body midline representation
RF
receptive field

CC
corpus callosum

Inhibitory postsynaptic potential
EEG
electroencephalogram

V1
(primary visual cortex
area 17)

LFPs
local field potentials

Animals
Humans
interhemispheric eeg coherence
SI
primary somatosensory cortex

primary visual-cortex
EM
electron microscopy

M1
primary motor cortex

TMS
transcranial magnetic stimulation

BDA
biotinylated dextran amine

axon diameter distribution
Axons
DCM
dynamic causal modeling

SCC
split corpus callosum

V2
(secondary visual cortex
area 18)

nervous system
SII
secondary somatosensory cortex

2nd somatosensory cortex
Neuroscience
stimulus-dependent changes
Zdroj: Innocenti, G M, Schmidt, K, Milleret, C, Fabri, M, Knyazeva, M G, Battaglia-Mayer, A, Aboitiz, F, Ptito, M, Caleo, M, Marzi, C A, Barakovic, M, Lepore, F & Caminiti, R 2022, ' The functional characterization of callosal connections ', Progress in Neurobiology, vol. 208, 102186 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pneurobio.2021.102186
Repositório Institucional da UFRN
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN)
instacron:UFRN
Progress in Neurobiology
DOI: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2021.102186
Popis: Highlights • The functional characterization of callosal connections is informed by anatomical data. • Callosal connections play a conditional driving role depending on the brain state and behavioral demands. • Callosal connections play a modulatory function, in addition to a driving role. • The corpus callosum participates in learning and interhemispheric transfer of sensorimotor habits. • The corpus callosum contributes to language processing and cognitive functions.
The brain operates through the synaptic interaction of distant neurons within flexible, often heterogeneous, distributed systems. Histological studies have detailed the connections between distant neurons, but their functional characterization deserves further exploration. Studies performed on the corpus callosum in animals and humans are unique in that they capitalize on results obtained from several neuroscience disciplines. Such data inspire a new interpretation of the function of callosal connections and delineate a novel road map, thus paving the way toward a general theory of cortico-cortical connectivity. Here we suggest that callosal axons can drive their post-synaptic targets preferentially when coupled to other inputs endowing the cortical network with a high degree of conditionality. This might depend on several factors, such as their pattern of convergence-divergence, the excitatory and inhibitory operation mode, the range of conduction velocities, the variety of homotopic and heterotopic projections and, finally, the state-dependency of their firing. We propose that, in addition to direct stimulation of post-synaptic targets, callosal axons often play a conditional driving or modulatory role, which depends on task contingencies, as documented by several recent studies.
Databáze: OpenAIRE