PUBLICATION
Microscale Neuronal Activity Collectively Drives Chaotic and Inflexible Dynamics at the Macroscale in Seizures
- Authors
- Burrows, D., Diana, G., Pimpel, B., Moeller, F., Richardson, M.P., Bassett, D.S., Meyer, M.P., Rosch, R.E.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-230406-54
- Date
- 2023
- Source
- The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 43(18): 3259-3283 (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- Keywords
- none
- MeSH Terms
-
- Epilepsy*
- Male
- Seizures/chemically induced
- Neurons/physiology
- Animals
- Female
- Zebrafish*
- Brain
- Models, Neurological
- PubMed
- 37019622 Full text @ J. Neurosci.
Citation
Burrows, D., Diana, G., Pimpel, B., Moeller, F., Richardson, M.P., Bassett, D.S., Meyer, M.P., Rosch, R.E. (2023) Microscale Neuronal Activity Collectively Drives Chaotic and Inflexible Dynamics at the Macroscale in Seizures. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. 43(18):3259-3283.
Abstract
Neuronal activity propagates through the network during seizures, engaging brain dynamics at multiple scales. Such propagating events can be described through the avalanches framework, which can relate spatiotemporal activity at the microscale with global network properties. Interestingly, propagating avalanches in healthy networks are indicative of critical dynamics, where the network is organised to a phase transition, which optimises certain computational properties. Some have hypothesised that the pathological brain dynamics of epileptic seizures are an emergent property of microscale neuronal networks collectively driving the brain away from criticality. Demonstrating this would provide a unifying mechanism linking microscale spatiotemporal activity with emergent brain dysfunction during seizures. Here, we investigated the effect of drug-induced seizures on critical avalanche dynamics, using in vivo whole-brain 2-photon imaging of GCaMP6s larval zebrafish (males and females) at single neuron resolution. We demonstrate that single neuron activity across the whole brain exhibits a loss of critical statistics during seizures, suggesting that microscale activity collectively drives macroscale dynamics away from criticality. We also construct spiking network models at the scale of the larval zebrafish brain, to demonstrate that only densely connected networks can drive brain-wide seizure dynamics away from criticality. Importantly, such dense networks also disrupt the optimal computational capacities of critical networks, leading to chaotic dynamics, impaired network response properties and sticky states, thus helping to explain functional impairments during seizures. This study bridges the gap between microscale neuronal activity and emergent macroscale dynamics and cognitive dysfunction during seizures.Significance StatementEpileptic seizures are debilitating and impair normal brain function. It is unclear how the coordinated behaviour of neurons collectively impairs brain function during seizures. To investigate this we perform fluorescence microscopy in larval zebrafish, which allows for the recording of whole-brain activity at single-neuron resolution. Using techniques from physics, we show that neuronal activity during seizures drives the brain away from criticality, a regime that enables both high and low activity states, into an inflexible regime that drives high activity states. Importantly, this change is caused by more connections in the network, which we show disrupts the ability of the brain to respond appropriately to its environment. Therefore, we identify key neuronal network mechanisms driving seizures and concurrent cognitive dysfunction.
Genes / Markers
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping