Cell reports | 2019

Cortex-wide Changes in Extracellular Potassium Ions Parallel Brain State Transitions in Awake Behaving Mice.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Brain state fluctuations modulate sensory processing, but the factors governing state-dependent neural activity remain unclear. Here, we tracked the dynamics of cortical extracellular K+ concentrations ([K+]o) during awake state transitions and manipulated [K+]o in slices, during visual processing, and during skilled motor execution. When mice transitioned from quiescence to locomotion, [K+]o increased by 0.6-1.0\xa0mM in all cortical areas analyzed, and this preceded locomotion by 1 s. Emulating the state-dependent [K+]o increase in cortical slices caused neuronal depolarization and enhanced input-output transformation. In\xa0vivo, locomotion increased the gain of visually evoked responses in layer 2/3 of visual cortex; this effect was recreated by imposing a [K+]o increase. Elevating [K+]o in the motor cortex increased movement-induced neuronal spiking in layer 5 and improved motor performance. Thus, [K+]o increases in a cortex-wide state-dependent manner, and this [K+]o increase affects both sensory and motor processing through the dynamic modulation of neural activity.

Volume 28 5
Pages \n 1182-1194.e4\n
DOI 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.06.082
Language English
Journal Cell reports

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