Paired spiking robustly shapes spontaneous activity in neural networks in vitro
Aurel Vasile Martiniuc, Victor Boco\c{s}-Bin\c{t}in\c{t}an, Rouhollah, Habibey, Asiyeh Golabchi, Alois Knoll, Axel Blau

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that in vitro neural networks develop in vivo-like paired spiking activity that shapes their spontaneous activity and functional connectivity, indicating a robust intrinsic coding mechanism.
Contribution
It reveals that paired spiking activity emerges early and becomes robust in cultured neural networks, contributing to functional connectivity and information transfer, similar to in vivo systems.
Findings
Paired spiking activity appears early and persists throughout development.
PS activity becomes more complex and spatially organized over time.
PS activity is involved in establishing effective functional connectivity.
Abstract
In vivo, neurons establish functional connections and preserve information along their synaptic pathways from one information processing stage to the next in a very efficient manner. Paired spiking (PS) enhancement plays a key role by acting as a temporal filter that deletes less informative spikes. We analyzed the spontaneous neural activity evolution in a hippocampal and a cortical network over several weeks exploring whether the same PS coding mechanism appears in neuronal cultures as well. We show that self-organized neural in vitro networks not only develop characteristic bursting activity, but feature robust in vivo-like PS activity. PS activity formed spatiotemporal patterns that started at early days in vitro (DIVs) and lasted until the end of the recording sessions. Initially random-like and sparse PS patterns became robust after three weeks in vitro (WIVs). They were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
