Inhibitory Neuronal Circuits

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edit edit Organization of inhibitory circuits

Most of the long neuronal pathways are excitatory. The inhibition effect has to be related through an interneuron specialized for inhibition. Inhibitory circuits are based on the postsynaptic inhibition (most frequently GABA or glycine mediated – there are also similar facilitatory circuits).

There are 3 types of inhibitory circuits:

  1. Feed-forward inhibitory circuit.
  2. Feed-back inhibitory circuit.
  3. Lateral inhibition.

edit edit Feed-forward inhibitory circuit

Feedback-inhibition.png

edit edit Feed-back inhibitory circuit

edit edit Lateral inhibition


edit edit Significance of the inhibitory circuits

Activity of nerve cells is accompanied by a strong background noise, hence the signal has to be transmitted via a system of parallel lines carrying much the same signal (→ redundancy of the information). At every interconnection level, the signal has to be amplified and the noise reduced (the role of facilitatory and inhibitory local circuits) – neurons have to "shout together" to get the message across and make a reliable signal despite the noise. Inhibition action has to focus (sharpen) the picture transmitted by the neuronal pathways (e.g., Renshaw cells terminate the action of motoneurons). Target neurons actively search for "their" signals – inhibition of other signals.


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