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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Ekerot Carl Fredrik) srt2:(2005-2009)"

Search: WFRF:(Ekerot Carl Fredrik) > (2005-2009)

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1.
  • Ekerot, Carl-Fredrik, et al. (author)
  • Synaptic Integration in Cerebellar Granule Cells
  • 2008
  • In: Cerebellum. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1473-4230. ; 7:4, s. 539-541
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • To understand the function of cerebellar granule cells, we need detailed knowledge about the information carried by their afferent mossy fibers and how this information is integrated by the granule cells. Recently, we made whole cell recordings from granule cells in the non-anesthetized, decerebrate cats. All recordings were made in the forelimb area of the C3 zone for which the afferent and efferent connections and functional organization have been investigated in detail. Major findings of the study were that the mossy fiber input to single granule cells was modality- and receptive field-specific and that simultaneous activity in two and usually more of the afferent mossy fibers were required to activate the granule cell spike. The high threshold for action potentials and the convergence of afferents with virtually identical information suggest that an important function of granule cells is to increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the mossy fiber-parallel fiber information. Thus a high-sensitivity, noisy mossy fiber input is transformed by the granule cell to a high-sensitivity, low-noise signal.
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2.
  • Jörntell, Henrik, et al. (author)
  • Properties of somatosensory synaptic integration in cerebellar granule cells in vivo.
  • 2006
  • In: The Journal of Neuroscience. - 1529-2401. ; 26:45, s. 11786-11797
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In decerebrated, nonanesthetized cats, we made intracellular whole-cell recordings and extracellular cell-attached recordings from granule cells in the cerebellar C3 zone. Spontaneous EPSPs had large, relatively constant peak amplitudes, whereas IPSPs were small and did not appear to contribute substantially to synaptic integration at a short time scale. In many cases, the EPSPs of individual mossy fiber synapses appeared to be separable by their peak amplitudes. A substantial proportion of our granule cells had small receptive fields on the forelimb skin. Skin stimulation evoked explosive responses in which the constituent EPSPs were analyzed. In the rising phase of the response, our analyses indicated a participation of three to four different mossy fiber synapses, corresponding to the total number of mossy fiber afferents. The cutaneous receptive fields of the driven EPSPs overlapped, indicating an absence of convergence of mossy fibers activated from different receptive fields. Also in granule cells activated by joint movements did we find indications that different afferents were driven by the same type of input. Regardless of input type, the temporal patterns of granule cell spike activity, both spontaneous and evoked, appeared to primarily follow the activity in the presynaptic mossy fibers, although much of the nonsynchronized mossy fiber input was filtered out. In contrast to the prevailing theories of granule cell function, our results suggest a function of granule cells as signal-to-noise enhancing threshold elements, rather than as sparse coding pattern discriminators or temporal pattern generators.
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  • Result 1-2 of 2
Type of publication
journal article (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (2)
Author/Editor
Ekerot, Carl-Fredrik (2)
Jörntell, Henrik (2)
University
Lund University (2)
Language
English (2)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)

Year

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