Synaptic plasticityhippocampus. Neur 8790 Topics in Neuroscience: Neuroplasticity. Outline. Synaptic plasticity hypothesis

Similar documents
Memory Systems II How Stored: Engram and LTP. Reading: BCP Chapter 25

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6

BIPN 140 Problem Set 6

Part 11: Mechanisms of Learning

Cellular Neurobiology / BIPN 140

How Synapses Integrate Information and Change

Synaptic Plasticity and the NMDA Receptor

Synaptic plasticity. Activity-dependent changes in synaptic strength. Changes in innervation patterns. New synapses or deterioration of synapses.

How Synapses Integrate Information and Change

NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES 34.3

Cellular mechanisms of information transfer: neuronal and synaptic plasticity

Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iglurs)

Synaptic Plasticity and Memory

Neuronal Plasticity, Learning and Memory. David Keays Institute of Molecular Pathology

Action potential. Definition: an all-or-none change in voltage that propagates itself down the axon

Notes: Synapse. Overview. PSYC Summer Professor Claffey PDF. Conversion from an signal to a signal - electrical signal is the

BIPN140 Lecture 12: Synaptic Plasticity (II)

Synaptic transmission

Synaptic plasticity and hippocampal memory

9.01 Introduction to Neuroscience Fall 2007

Synapses and synaptic plasticity. Lubica Benuskova Lecture 8 How neurons communicate How do we learn and remember

Synaptic Integration

Synaptic Communication. Steven McLoon Department of Neuroscience University of Minnesota

QUIZ/TEST REVIEW NOTES SECTION 7 NEUROPHYSIOLOGY [THE SYNAPSE AND PHARMACOLOGY]

Portions from Chapter 6 CHAPTER 7. The Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses. Chapter 7 Outline. and Supporting Cells

QUIZ YOURSELF COLOSSAL NEURON ACTIVITY

Problem Set 3 - Answers. -70mV TBOA

Synaptic Transmission: Ionic and Metabotropic

Cellular Neurobiology BIPN140

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline

Bioscience in the 21st century

The Neurobiology of Learning and Memory

1) Drop off in the Bi 150 box outside Baxter 331 or to the head TA (jcolas).

Synaptic plasticity. Mark van Rossum. Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation University of Edinburgh

Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory

Beyond Vanilla LTP. Spike-timing-dependent-plasticity or STDP

Chapter 9: Biochemical Mechanisms for Information Storage at the Cellular Level. From Mechanisms of Memory, second edition By J. David Sweatt, Ph.D.

Neurobiology: The nerve cell. Principle and task To use a nerve function model to study the following aspects of a nerve cell:

Learning and Memory. The Case of H.M.

Synaptic Transmission

What effect would an AChE inhibitor have at the neuromuscular junction?

Chapter 6 subtitles postsynaptic integration

CASE 49. What type of memory is available for conscious retrieval? Which part of the brain stores semantic (factual) memories?

Ion Channels (Part 2)

MCB MIDTERM EXAM #1 MONDAY MARCH 3, 2008 ANSWER KEY

Synap&c Plas&city. long-term plasticity (~30 min to lifetime) Long-term potentiation (LTP) / Long-term depression (LTD)

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire

Lecture: Introduction to nervous system development

5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons

BIPN100 F15 Human Physiology 1 Lecture 3. Synaptic Transmission p. 1

Section: Chapter 5: Multiple Choice. 1. The structure of synapses is best viewed with a(n):

Synapses. Objectives. Synaptic Relationships Between Neurons. Structure of a Chemical Synapse. Structure of a Chemical Synapse

Ameen Alsaras. Ameen Alsaras. Mohd.Khatatbeh

Communication within a Neuron

Na + K + pump. The beauty of the Na + K + pump. Cotransport. The setup Cotransport the result. Found along the plasma membrane of all cells.

Lecture 22: A little Neurobiology

VS : Systemische Physiologie - Animalische Physiologie für Bioinformatiker. Neuronenmodelle III. Modelle synaptischer Kurz- und Langzeitplastizität

Ion Channels Graphics are used with permission of: Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings (

Neurotransmitter Systems II Receptors. Reading: BCP Chapter 6

TA Review. Neuronal Synapses. Steve-Felix Belinga Neuronal synapse & Muscle

Chapter 2: Cellular Mechanisms and Cognition

NERVOUS SYSTEM 1 CHAPTER 10 BIO 211: ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY I

3) Most of the organelles in a neuron are located in the A) dendritic region. B) axon hillock. C) axon. D) cell body. E) axon terminals.

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

CHAPTER 44: Neurons and Nervous Systems

Neuromorphic computing

Psych 181: Dr. Anagnostaras

63 Cellular Mechanisms of Learning and the Biological Basis of Individuality

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling

Neurons, Synapses and Signaling. Chapter 48

Neurons! John A. White Dept. of Bioengineering

The Ever-Changing Brain. Dr. Julie Haas Biological Sciences

BIOLOGY 2050 LECTURE NOTES ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY I (A. IMHOLTZ) FUNDAMENTALS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND NERVOUS TISSUE P1 OF 5

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open

Cell communication. Gated ion channels. Voltage-Gated Na + Channel. Allow specific ions to pass only when gates are open

1) Drop off in the Bi 150 box outside Baxter 331 or to the head TA (jcolas).

Chapter 4 Neuronal Physiology

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Chapter 11: Nervous System and Nervous Tissue

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1

Neuroscience 201A (2016) - Problems in Synaptic Physiology

Intro to Cognitive Science

H. An electrical signal travel down the dendrite.

Nervous System. 2. Receives information from the environment from CNS to organs and glands. 1. Relays messages, processes info, analyzes data

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE

SYNAPTIC COMMUNICATION

What is Anatomy and Physiology?

Electrical Properties of Neurons. Steven McLoon Department of Neuroscience University of Minnesota

Introduction to Neurobiology

When cells are already maximally potentiated LTP is occluded.

Making Memories Stick

Introduction to Physiological Psychology

Copyright Dr. Franklin B. Krasne, Swimmy

Structure of a Neuron:

Outline. Neuron Structure. Week 4 - Nervous System. The Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses

Action Potentials and Synaptic Transmission. BIO 219 Napa Valley College Dr. Adam Ross

10.1: Introduction. Cell types in neural tissue: Neurons Neuroglial cells (also known as neuroglia, glia, and glial cells) Dendrites.

Neurons. Pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein. The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons.

Basics of Computational Neuroscience: Neurons and Synapses to Networks

Transcription:

Synaptic plasticityhippocampus Neur 8790 Topics in Neuroscience: Neuroplasticity Outline Synaptic plasticity hypothesis Long term potentiation in the hippocampus How it s measured What it looks like Mechanisms 1

Synaptic plasticity Synaptic strength Ease with which cell A can excite or inhibit cell B Synaptic plasticity Synaptic strength is not fixed- is modifiable Means by which experience can produce persistent changes in the brain Vs. neuron number Donald Hebb Hebb s postulate: When an axon of cell A is near enough to excite a cell B and repeatedly or persistently takes part in firing it, some growth process or metabolic change takes place in one or both cells so that A s efficiency, as one of the cells firing B, is increased. Hebbian synapse: theoretical connections among neurons that strengthen as a result of activity 2

Memory: strengthen synaptic connections that link neuronal populations Learning experience Retrieving the trace Long-term potentiation (LTP) The leading candidate cellular mechanism of memory 3

Understanding Field Potentials In many studies of LTP, the dependent variable is called the Field Excitatory Postsynaptic Potential AKA Field EPSP (fepsp) AKA population response. Critical to understand how it is measured and why it is thought to represent synaptic strength. Review synaptic transmission & PSPs Postsynaptic current causes excitatory or inhibitory postsynaptic potential that changes the excitability of the postsynaptic cell 4

The membrane potential Extracellular intracellular The membrane potential 5

6

fepsp & Synaptic Strength fepsp the rate at which positive ions are flowing away from the extracellular recording electrode. Assumed these positive ions are entering the postsynaptic neuron and depolarizing the slope of the fepsp indirectly measure the strength of the synaptic connections near the electrode. mv 70 Recording Electrode time Reference Electrode 7

mv Recording Electrode 70 time Reference Electrode 8

Long-term Potentiation An enduring (>1 hour) increase in synaptic efficacy that typically results from highfrequency stimulation of an afferent (input) pathway i.e., cellular memory, support for Hebb s postulate Synaptic connections in the hippocampus 9

Bliss and Lomo s experimental design: Stimulate a bundle of presynaptic axons Perforant path Use extracellular recording electrode to measure monosynaptic fepsp Dentate gyrus Record fepsp before and after high frequency stimulation Tetanic stimulation: brief burst of high frequency stimulation (50-100 stimuli at 100/sec) Increase in fepsp indicates potentiation Choosing the test and inducing stimuli 10

Define arrows 2 functions of test stimulus establishes a baseline, used to determine if the inducing stimulus produced LTP. 11

Remove hippocampus from brain and keep alive in a dish Observe cells, stimulate and record Allows study of plasticity in vertebrates Confirms Bliss & Lomo In vitro brain slice preparation Evidence of LTP Extracellular recordings more cells fire after tetanus Intracellular recordings individual cells have increased EPSPs more easily reach threshold for firing 12

Properties of LTP in CA1 Pairing Presynaptic and Postsynaptic Activity Causes LTP or STIM 13

The Chemical Basis of LTP: Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors glutamate released by the presynaptic neuron acts at 3 receptor subtypes on dendrites of postsynaptic neurons non-nmda receptors dominate in normal synaptic transmission Three types of glutamate receptors 14

Blocking NMDARs prevents induction but not expression What is special about NMDA receptors? 15

16

NMDA receptors are Hebbian coincidence detectors Double-gated Ligand-gated requires glutamate binding Signals presynaptic activity Voltage-gated requires depolarization to remove magnesium from the channel pore Signals postsynaptic activity Calcium is a signal that both the presynaptic neuron (glutamate) and postsynaptic neuron (depolarization) are active What produces the postsynaptic depolarization? activation of many AMPA receptors opened by the firing of the presynaptic neurons during tetanic stimulation glutamate opens AMPA temporal and spatial summation of EPSPs 17

Blocking AMPARs prevents induction & expression Steps involved in LTP induction 18

Second messengers First messengers: between neurons Second messengers: within the neuron Kinases Are Targets of Calcium and Calmodulin 19

CAMKII increases AMPA activity AMPA receptor conformation Allow larger influx of Na Move AMPA receptors from silent synapses Increase contribution to the synaptic response AMPA receptor trafficking between membrane & cytoplasm Increase contribution to the synaptic response Several P sites regulate AMPA function The GluR1 subunit has three phosphorylation sites represented as P1, P2, and P3. Each site is phosphorylated by a different kinase. The phosphorylation of each site regulates a different function. 20

Cytoskeletal changes also contribute to insertion of AMPARs Actin filaments are rearranged to broaden spines 21

LTP Phases Induction AMPA-dependent: produce sufficient depolarization NMDA-dependent: allow Ca entry into postsynaptic cell Maintenance & expression AMPA-dependent: trafficking, conductance, cytoskeleton LTP Early Phase (ELTP) Protein kinase activation and protein phosphorylation LTP Late Phase (LLTP) Protein synthesis from existing mrna and from gene expression LTP depends on stimulus used to induce it Long-lasting (L)-LTP induced by strong highfrequency stimulation depends on transcription processes that generate new mrnas translation processes that synthesize new proteins. Short-lasting (S)-LTP induced by relatively weak high-frequency stimulation Ca, protein kinases, 22

Protein synthesis is required for L-LTP Transcription (In the Nucleus) & Translation (Outside the Nucleus) Transcription: a portion of DNA is converted into RNA in the nucleus Protein synthesis: ribosomes translate mrna into protein 23

Genes Transcribed by CREB are Important for L-LTP but not S-LTP Field EPSP (% of Baseline) 200 150 125 100 Con CREB KO -30-10 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Time (mins) Synaptic activity induces translation of mrna already present- not new mrna 24

Parallel effects of synaptic activity produce L-LTP Local translation Existing mrna Genomic cascade New mrna Two waves of protein synthesis important for L-LTP 25

What proteins (plasticity products PPs) are made? CaMKII GluR1/2 subunits/ampa receptors Proteins that facilitate transport of other proteins e.g. eukaryotic elongation factor 1A (eef1a) Cytoskeletal proteins e.g., integrins 26