Mechanism for a sliding synaptic modification threshold
نویسنده
چکیده
Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a long-lasting increase in synaptic effectiveness that results from high frequency stimulation (HFS) of certain excitatory synapses in hippo-campus and neocortex (reviewed by Bliss and Colling-ridge, 1993). Because it is induced by brief episodes of electrical stimulation that resemble patterns observed in the brains of behaving animals, and because it can be very long-lasting, LTP has attracted a great deal of interest as a possible synaptic mechanism for learning and memory. In addition to this role, it has been suggested that the properties of LTP are also well-suited to account for aspects of experience-dependent development. LTP results when presynaptic activity coincides with strong post-synaptic depolarization beyond a threshold value. Thus, the development of binocularly responsive neurons in the visual cortex, for example, could be accounted for by asso-ciative LTP caused by the simultaneous activation of converging inputs from the two eyes. In addition to an LTP-like mechanism, it has been recognized for some time that, to account for developmental plasticity in the cortex, there must be a mechanism for activity-dependent decreases in synaptic strength. For example , during acritical period of early postnatal life, depriving an eye of visual patterns leads to an activity-dependent decrease in the effectiveness of deprived synapses in visual cortex. Indeed, the activity-dependent pruning of connections is a very prominent feature of postnatal development throughout the nervous system. Thus, developmental neurobiologists have sought an experimental model for use-dependent decreases in synaptic strength in the CNS. Here, theoretical analysis of developmental plasticity has been of considerable value. According to the Bienenstock-Cooper-Munro (BCM) theory developed to account for aspects of visual cortical development, long-term depression (LTD) should result when input activity consistently fails to activate postsynaptic neurons beyond the threshold for LTP (Bienenstock et al., 1982; Bear et al., 1987). This insight inspired the attempt to produce LTD with repetitive low frequency stimulation (LFS; Dudek and Bear, 1992). LFS-induced LTD is now a well-established model of synaptic plasticity in slices of hippo-campus and neocortex (reviewed by Bear and Malenka, 1994). In the CA1 region of hippocampus and in layer Ill of visual cortex, LFS of excitatory afferents produces LTD, and HFS produces LTP (Kirkwood et al., 1993). Both forms of synaptic plasticity depend on N-methyl-o-aspartate (NMDA) receptor activation and postsynaptic Ca " + entry. Available data support a model in which the state of correlation of pre-and postsynaptic aciiviiy is converted 5y the voltage-dependent …
منابع مشابه
In a Bcm-like Synaptic Learning Rule the H Current Is a Candidate Mechanism for Regulating the Sliding Modification Threshold
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Emergent Dynamical Properties of the BCM Learning Rule
The Bienenstock-Cooper-Munro (BCM) learning rule provides a simple setup for synaptic modification that combines a Hebbian product rule with a homeostatic mechanism that keeps the weights bounded. The homeostatic part of the learning rule depends on the time average of the post-synaptic activity and provides a sliding threshold that distinguishes between increasing or decreasing weights. There ...
متن کاملThe h current is a candidate mechanism for regulating the sliding modification threshold in a BCM-like synaptic learning rule.
Hebbian synaptic plasticity acts as a positive feedback mechanism and can destabilize a neuronal network unless concomitant homeostatic processes that counterbalance this instability are activated. Within a Bienenstock-Cooper-Munro (BCM)-like plasticity framework, such compensation is achieved through a modification threshold that slides in an activity-dependent fashion. Although the BCM-like p...
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Corresponding Author 5 6 Daniel Johnston, Ph.D. 7 Center for Learning and Memory 8 The University of Texas at Austin 9 1, University Station Stop, C7000 10 Austin, TX 78712-0805, USA. 11 12 e-mail: [email protected] 13 Phone: 512-232-6564 14 Fax: 512-475-8000 15 16 17 † Present Address: 18 19 Rishikesh Narayanan, Ph.D. 20 Molecular Biophysics Unit 21 Indian Institute of Science 22 B...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Neuron
دوره 15 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1995