Skip to main content
Article
Locus ceruleus regulates sensory encoding by neurons and networks in waking animals
Journal of Neuroscience (2006)
  • David M. Devilbiss, Rowan University School of Osteopathic Medicine
  • Michelle E. Page, University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Barry Waterhouse, Rowan University School of Osteopathic Medicine
Abstract
Substantial evidence indicates that the locus ceruleus (LC)-norepinephrine (NE) projection system regulates behavioral state and state-dependent processing of sensory information. Tonic LC discharge (0.1-5.0 Hz) is correlated with levels of arousal and demonstrates an optimal firing rate during good performance in a sustained attention task. In addition, studies have shown that locally applied NE or LC stimulation can modulate the responsiveness of neurons, including those in the thalamus, to nonmonoaminergic synaptic inputs. Many recent investigations further indicate that within sensory relay circuits of the thalamus both general and specific features of sensory information are represented within the collective firing patterns of like-modality neurons. However, no studies have examined the impact of NE or LC output on the discharge properties of ensembles of functionally related cells in intact, conscious animals. Here, we provide evidence linking LC neuronal discharge and NE efflux with LC-mediated modulation of single-neuron and neuronal ensemble representations of sensory stimuli in the ventral posteriomedial thalamus of waking rats. As such, the current study provides evidence that output from the LC across a physiologic range modulates single thalamic neuron responsiveness to synaptic input and representation of sensory information across ensembles of thalamic neurons in a manner that is consistent with the well documented actions of LC output on cognition.
Keywords
  • Implanted Electrodes,
  • Locus Coeruleus,
  • Microdialysis,
  • Nerve Net,
  • Neurons,
  • Norepinephrine,
  • Posterior Thalamic Nuclei,
  • Sensation,
  • Ventral Thalamic Nuclei,
  • Vibrissae,
  • Wakefulness
Publication Date
September 27, 2006
DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1776-06.2006
Publisher Statement
Material published in 2014 and earlier is released under...the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0).

Authors do not need to contact the journal to obtain rights for reuse of their material as long as they provide proper attribution to the place of original publication and, for the first six months after publication, refrain from making the work publicly available.

Authors are allowed to post a copy of their article in an institutional repository or on their website following the first six months after publication, as long as appropriate credit is provided to the work published in JNeurosci.
Citation Information
David M. Devilbiss, Michelle E. Page and Barry Waterhouse. "Locus ceruleus regulates sensory encoding by neurons and networks in waking animals" Journal of Neuroscience Vol. 26 Iss. 39 (2006) p. 9860 - 9872 ISSN: Print: 0270-6474 Online: 1529-2401
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/Devilbiss_DM/15/