Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Régis C. Lambert is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Régis C. Lambert.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Essential Thalamic Contribution to Slow Waves of Natural Sleep

Francois David; Joscha T. Schmiedt; Hannah Taylor; Gergely Orban; Giuseppe Di Giovanni; Victor N. Uebele; John J. Renger; Régis C. Lambert; Nathalie Leresche; Vincenzo Crunelli

Slow waves represent one of the prominent EEG signatures of non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep and are thought to play an important role in the cellular and network plasticity that occurs during this behavioral state. These slow waves of natural sleep are currently considered to be exclusively generated by intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms within neocortical territories, although a role for the thalamus in this key physiological rhythm has been suggested but never demonstrated. Combining neuronal ensemble recordings, microdialysis, and optogenetics, here we show that the block of the thalamic output to the neocortex markedly (up to 50%) decreases the frequency of slow waves recorded during non-REM sleep in freely moving, naturally sleeping-waking rats. A smaller volume of thalamic inactivation than during sleep is required for observing similar effects on EEG slow waves recorded during anesthesia, a condition in which both bursts and single action potentials of thalamocortical neurons are almost exclusively dependent on T-type calcium channels. Thalamic inactivation more strongly reduces spindles than slow waves during both anesthesia and natural sleep. Moreover, selective excitation of thalamocortical neurons strongly entrains EEG slow waves in a narrow frequency band (0.75–1.5 Hz) only when thalamic T-type calcium channels are functionally active. These results demonstrate that the thalamus finely tunes the frequency of slow waves during non-REM sleep and anesthesia, and thus provide the first conclusive evidence that a dynamic interplay of the neocortical and thalamic oscillators of slow waves is required for the full expression of this key physiological EEG rhythm.


EMBO Reports | 2006

Live imaging of neural structure and function by fibred fluorescence microscopy

Pierre Vincent; Uwe Maskos; Igor Charvet; Laurence Bourgeais; Luc Stoppini; Nathalie Leresche; Jean-Pierre Changeux; Régis C. Lambert; Paolo Meda; Danièle Paupardin-Tritsch

Only a few methods permit researchers to study selected regions of the central and peripheral nervous systems with a spatial and time resolution sufficient to image the function of neural structures. Usually, these methods cannot analyse deep‐brain regions and a high‐resolution method, which could repeatedly probe dynamic processes in any region of the central and peripheral nervous systems, is much needed. Here, we show that fibred fluorescence microscopy—which uses a small‐diameter fibre‐optic probe to provide real‐time images—has the spatial resolution to image various neural structures in the living animal, the consistency needed for a sequential, quantitative evaluation of axonal degeneration/regeneration of a peripheral nerve, and the sensitivity to detect calcium transients on a sub‐second timescale. These unique features should prove useful in many physiological studies requiring the in situ functional imaging of tissues in a living animal.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2012

From sleep spindles of natural sleep to spike and wave discharges of typical absence seizures: is the hypothesis still valid?

Nathalie Leresche; Régis C. Lambert; Adam C. Errington; Vincenzo Crunelli

The temporal coincidence of sleep spindles and spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) in patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsies, together with the transformation of spindles into SWDs following intramuscular injection of the weak GABAA receptor (GABAAR) antagonist, penicillin, in an experimental model, brought about the view that SWDs may represent ‘perverted’ sleep spindles. Over the last 20xa0years, this hypothesis has received considerable support, in particular by in vitro studies of thalamic oscillations following pharmacological/genetic manipulations of GABAARs. However, from a critical appraisal of the evidence in absence epilepsy patients and well-established models of absence epilepsy it emerges that SWDs can occur as frequently during wakefulness as during sleep, with their preferential occurrence in either one of these behavioural states often being patient dependent. Moreover, whereas the EEG expression of both SWDs and sleep spindles requires the integrity of the entire cortico-thalamo-cortical network, SWDs initiates in cortex while sleep spindles in thalamus. Furthermore, the hypothesis of a reduction in GABAAR function across the entire cortico-thalamo-cortical network as the basis for the transformation of sleep spindles into SWDs is no longer tenable. In fact, while a decreased GABAAR function may be present in some cortical layers and in the reticular thalamic nucleus, both phasic and tonic GABAAR inhibitions of thalamo-cortical neurons are either unchanged or increased in this epileptic phenotype. In summary, these differences between SWDs and sleep spindles question the view that the EEG hallmark of absence seizures results from a transformation of this EEG oscillation of natural sleep.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

T-Type Calcium Channels Consolidate Tonic Action Potential Output of Thalamic Neurons to Neocortex

Charlotte Deleuze; François David; Sébastien Béhuret; Gérard Sadoc; Hee-Sup Shin; Victor N. Uebele; John J. Renger; Régis C. Lambert; Nathalie Leresche; Thierry Bal

The thalamic output during different behavioral states is strictly controlled by the firing modes of thalamocortical neurons. During sleep, their hyperpolarized membrane potential allows activation of the T-type calcium channels, promoting rhythmic high-frequency burst firing that reduces sensory information transfer. In contrast, in the waking state thalamic neurons mostly exhibit action potentials at low frequency (i.e., tonic firing), enabling the reliable transfer of incoming sensory inputs to cortex. Because of their nearly complete inactivation at the depolarized potentials that are experienced during the wake state, T-channels are not believed to modulate tonic action potential discharges. Here, we demonstrate using mice brain slices that activation of T-channels in thalamocortical neurons maintained in the depolarized/wake-like state is critical for the reliable expression of tonic firing, securing their excitability over changes in membrane potential that occur in the depolarized state. Our results establish a novel mechanism for the integration of sensory information by thalamocortical neurons and point to an unexpected role for T-channels in the early stage of information processing.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2014

The many faces of T-type calcium channels

Régis C. Lambert; Thomas Bessaih; Vincenzo Crunelli; Nathalie Leresche

Since the discovery of low-voltage-activated T-type calcium channels in sensory neurons and the initial characterization of their physiological function mainly in inferior olive and thalamic neurons, studies on neuronal T-type currents have predominantly focused on the generation of low-threshold spike (and associated action potential burst firing) which is strictly conditioned by a preceding hyperpolarization. This T-type current mediated activity has become an archetype of the function of these channels, constraining our view of the potential physiological and pathological roles that they may play in controlling the excitability of single cells and neural networks. However, greatly helped by the recent availability of the first potent and selective antagonists for this class of calcium channels, novel T-type current functions are rapidly being uncovered, including their surprising involvement in neuronal excitability at depolarized membrane potentials and their complex control of dendritic integration and neurotransmitter release. These and other data summarized in this short review clearly indicate a much wider physiological involvement of T-type channels in neuronal activity than previously expected.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2014

Role for T-type Ca2+ channels in sleep waves

Vincenzo Crunelli; Francois David; Nathalie Leresche; Régis C. Lambert

Since their discovery more than 30xa0years ago, low-threshold T-type Ca2+ channels (T channels) have been suggested to play a key role in many EEG waves of non-REM sleep, which has remained exclusively linked to the ability of these channels to generate low-threshold Ca2+ potentials and associated high-frequency bursts of action potentials. Our present understanding of the biophysics and physiology of T channels, however, highlights a much more diverse and complex picture of the pivotal contributions that they make to different sleep rhythms. In particular, recent experimental evidence has conclusively demonstrated the essential contribution of thalamic T channels to the expression of slow waves of natural sleep and the key role played by Ca2+ entry through these channels in the activation or modulation of other voltage-dependent channels that are important for the generation of both slow waves and sleep spindles. However, the precise contribution to sleep rhythms of T channels in cortical neurons and other sleep-controlling neuronal networks remains unknown, and a full understanding of the cellular and network mechanisms of sleep delta waves is still lacking.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Dynamics of Intrinsic Dendritic Calcium Signaling during Tonic Firing of Thalamic Reticular Neurons

Patrick Chausson; Nathalie Leresche; Régis C. Lambert

The GABAergic neurons of the nucleus reticularis thalami that control the communication between thalamus and cortex are interconnected not only through axo-dendritic synapses but also through gap junctions and dendro-dendritic synapses. It is still unknown whether these dendritic communication processes may be triggered both by the tonic and the T-type Ca2+ channel-dependent high frequency burst firing of action potentials displayed by nucleus reticularis neurons during wakefulness and sleep, respectively. Indeed, while it is known that activation of T-type Ca2+ channels actively propagates throughout the dendritic tree, it is still unclear whether tonic action potential firing can also invade the dendritic arborization. Here, using two-photon microscopy, we demonstrated that dendritic Ca2+ responses following somatically evoked action potentials that mimic wake-related tonic firing are detected throughout the dendritic arborization. Calcium influx temporally summates to produce dendritic Ca2+ accumulations that are linearly related to the duration of the action potential trains. Increasing the firing frequency facilitates Ca2+ influx in the proximal but not in the distal dendritic compartments suggesting that the dendritic arborization acts as a low-pass filter in respect to the back-propagating action potentials. In the more distal compartment of the dendritic tree, T-type Ca2+ channels play a crucial role in the action potential triggered Ca2+ influx suggesting that this Ca2+ influx may be controlled by slight changes in the local dendritic membrane potential that determine the T-type channels’ availability. We conclude that by mediating Ca2+ dynamic in the whole dendritic arborization, both tonic and burst firing of the nucleus reticularis thalami neurons might control their dendro-dendritic and electrical communications.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2014

Investigating local and long-range neuronal network dynamics by simultaneous optogenetics, reverse microdialysis and silicon probe recordings in vivo

Hannah Taylor; Joscha T. Schmiedt; Nihan Çarçak; Filiz Onat; Giuseppe Di Giovanni; Régis C. Lambert; Nathalie Leresche; Vincenzo Crunelli; Francois David

Highlights • Optogenetics and microdialysis can be successfully combined.• How to manipulate circuits of spontaneous and evoked activities with drugs and lights?• Thalamic control of delta waves and sleep spindles.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Sleep Slow Wave-Related Homo and Heterosynaptic LTD of Intrathalamic GABAAergic Synapses: Involvement of T-Type Ca2+ Channels and Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors

Romain Pigeat; Patrick Chausson; Fanny M. Dreyfus; Nathalie Leresche; Régis C. Lambert

Slow waves of non-REM sleep are suggested to play a role in shaping synaptic connectivity to consolidate recently acquired memories and/or restore synaptic homeostasis. During sleep slow waves, both GABAergic neurons of the nucleus reticularis thalami (NRT) and thalamocortical (TC) neurons discharge high-frequency bursts of action potentials mediated by low-threshold calcium spikes due to T-type Ca2+ channel activation. Although such activity of the intrathalamic network characterized by high-frequency firing and calcium influx is highly suited to modify synaptic efficacy, very little is still known about its consequences on intrathalamic synapse strength. Combining in vitro electrophysiological recordings and calcium imaging, here we show that the inhibitory GABAergic synapses between NRT and TC neurons of the rat somatosensory nucleus develop a long-term depression (I-LTD) when challenged by a stimulation paradigm that mimics the thalamic network activity occurring during sleep slow waves. The mechanism underlying this plasticity presents unique features as it is both heterosynaptic and homosynaptic in nature and requires Ca2+ entry selectively through T-type Ca2+ channels and activation of the Ca2+-activated phosphatase, calcineurin. We propose that during slow-wave sleep the tight functional coupling between GABAA receptors, calcineurin, and T-type Ca2+ channels will elicit LTD of the activated GABAergic synapses when coupled with concomitant activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors postsynaptic to cortical afferences. This I-LTD may be a key element involved in the reshaping of the somatosensory information pathway during sleep.


Nature Neuroscience | 2018

Cortical drive and thalamic feed-forward inhibition control thalamic output synchrony during absence seizures

Cian McCafferty; Francois David; Marcello Venzi; Magor Lörincz; Francis Delicata; Zoe Atherton; Gregorio Egidio Recchia; Gergely Orban; Régis C. Lambert; Giuseppe Di Giovanni; Nathalie Leresche; Vincenzo Crunelli

Behaviorally and pathologically relevant cortico-thalamo-cortical oscillations are driven by diverse interacting cell-intrinsic and synaptic processes. However, the mechanism that gives rise to the paroxysmal oscillations of absence seizures (ASs) remains unknown. Here we report that, during ASs in behaving animals, cortico-thalamic excitation drives thalamic firing by preferentially eliciting tonic rather than T-type Ca2+ channel (T-channel)-dependent burst firing in thalamocortical (TC) neurons and by temporally framing thalamic output via feedforward reticular thalamic (NRT)-to-TC neuron inhibition. In TC neurons, overall ictal firing was markedly reduced and bursts rarely occurred. Moreover, blockade of T-channels in cortical and NRT neurons suppressed ASs, but such blockade in TC neurons had no effect on seizures or on ictal thalamic output synchrony. These results demonstrate ictal bidirectional cortico-thalamic communications and provide the first mechanistic understanding of cortico-thalamo-cortical network firing dynamics during ASs in behaving animals.The authors demonstrate that the thalamic output during absence seizures is controlled and synchronized by a combination of excitation from the cortex and fast feedforward inhibition from reticular thalamus, with little involvement of thalamocortical neuron intrinsic mechanisms.

Collaboration


Dive into the Régis C. Lambert's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Chausson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gergely Orban

Eötvös Loránd University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Céline Lemmers

University of Montpellier

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge