Topic Introduction

Cellular and Synaptic Properties of Local Inhibitory Circuits

  1. Court Hull1,2
  1. 1Department of Neurobiology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27710
  1. 2Correspondence: Hull{at}neuro.duke.edu

Abstract

Inhibitory interneurons play a key role in sculpting the information processed by neural circuits. Despite the wide range of physiologically and morphologically distinct types of interneurons that have been identified, common principles have emerged that have shed light on how synaptic inhibition operates, both mechanistically and functionally, across cell types and circuits. This introduction summarizes how electrophysiological approaches have been used to illuminate these key principles, including basic interneuron circuit motifs, the functional properties of inhibitory synapses, and the main roles for synaptic inhibition in regulating neural circuit function. It also highlights how some key electrophysiological methods and experiments have advanced our understanding of inhibitory synapse function.

Footnotes

  • From the Ion Channels collection, edited by Paul J. Kammermeier, Ian Duguid, and Stephan Brenowitz.

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