Striatal cholinergic receptor activation causes a rapid, selective and state‐dependent rise in cortico‐striatal β activity

Male Time Factors Motor Cortex Cholinergic Agonists Corpus Striatum Mice, Inbred C57BL Mice 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine 616 Neural Pathways Animals Female Receptors, Cholinergic Beta Rhythm
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.13906 Publication Date: 2018-03-12T14:26:39Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractCortico‐basal ganglia‐thalamic (CBT) β oscillations (15–30 Hz) are elevated in Parkinson's disease and correlated with movement disability. To date, no experimental paradigm outside of loss of dopamine has been able to specifically elevate β oscillations in the CBT loop. Here, we show that activation of striatal cholinergic receptors selectively increased β oscillations in mouse striatum and motor cortex. In individuals showing simultaneous β increases in both striatum and M1, β partial directed coherence (PDC) increased from striatum to M1 (but not in the reverse direction). In individuals that did not show simultaneous β increases, β PDC increased from M1 to striatum (but not in the reverse direction), and M1 was characterized by persistent β‐high frequency oscillation phase–amplitude coupling. Finally, the direction of β PDC distinguished between β sub‐bands. This suggests that (1) striatal cholinergic tone exerts state‐dependent and frequency‐selective control over CBT β power and coordination; (2) ongoing rhythmic dynamics can determine whether elevated β oscillations are expressed in striatum and M1; and (3) altered striatal cholinergic tone differentially modulates distinct β sub‐bands.
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