Synapse

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences

Kinds of Synapse

  • cell synapse
  • granule cell synapse
  • immunological synapse

  • Terms modified by Synapse

  • synapse density
  • synapse development
  • synapse elimination
  • synapse formation
  • synapse function
  • synapse loss
  • synapse maturation
  • synapse number

  • Selected Abstracts


    An Organic Nanoparticle Transistor Behaving as a Biological Spiking Synapse

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 2 2010
    Fabien Alibart
    Abstract Molecule-based devices are envisioned to complement silicon devices by providing new functions or by implementing existing functions at a simpler process level and lower cost, by virtue of their self-organization capabilities. Moreover, they are not bound to von Neuman architecture and this feature may open the way to other architectural paradigms. Neuromorphic electronics is one of them. Here, a device made of molecules and nanoparticles,a nanoparticle organic memory field-effect transistor (NOMFET),that exhibits the main behavior of a biological spiking synapse is demonstrated. Facilitating and depressing synaptic behaviors can be reproduced by the NOMFET and can be programmed. The synaptic plasticity for real-time computing is evidenced and described by a simple model. These results open the way to rate-coding utilization of the NOMFET in dynamical neuromorphic computing circuits. [source]


    Activation of the basal forebrain by the orexin/hypocretin neurones

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2010
    E. Arrigoni
    Abstract The orexin neurones play an essential role in driving arousal and in maintaining normal wakefulness. Lack of orexin neurotransmission produces a chronic state of hypoarousal characterized by excessive sleepiness, frequent transitions between wake and sleep, and episodes of cataplexy. A growing body of research now suggests that the basal forebrain (BF) may be a key site through which the orexin-producing neurones promote arousal. Here we review anatomical, pharmacological and electrophysiological studies on how the orexin neurones may promote arousal by exciting cortically projecting neurones of the BF. Orexin fibres synapse on BF cholinergic neurones and orexin-A is released in the BF during waking. Local application of orexins excites BF cholinergic neurones, induces cortical release of acetylcholine and promotes wakefulness. The orexin neurones also contain and probably co-release the inhibitory neuropeptide dynorphin. We found that orexin-A and dynorphin have specific effects on different classes of BF neurones that project to the cortex. Cholinergic neurones were directly excited by orexin-A, but did not respond to dynorphin. Non-cholinergic BF neurones that project to the cortex seem to comprise at least two populations with some directly excited by orexin-A that may represent wake-active, GABAergic neurones, whereas others did not respond to orexin-A but were inhibited by dynorphin and may be sleep-active, GABAergic neurones. This evidence suggests that the BF is a key site through which orexins activate the cortex and promote behavioural arousal. In addition, orexins and dynorphin may act synergistically in the BF to promote arousal and improve cognitive performance. [source]


    Expression of multiple class three semaphorins in the retina and along the path of zebrafish retinal axons

    DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 10 2007
    Davon C. Callander
    Abstract Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) extend axons that exit the eye, cross the midline at the optic chiasm, and synapse on target cells in the optic tectum. Class three semaphorins (Sema3s) are a family of molecules known to direct axon growth. We undertook an expression screen to identify sema3s expressed in the retina and/or brain close to in-growing RGC axons, which might therefore influence retinal-tectal pathfinding. We find that sema3Aa, 3Fa, 3Ga, and 3Gb are expressed in the retina, although only sema3Fa is present during the time window when the axons extend. Also, we show that sema3Aa and sema3E are present near or at the optic chiasm. Furthermore, sema3C, 3Fa, 3Ga, and 3Gb are expressed in regions of the diencephalon near the path taken by RGC axons. Finally, the optic tectum expresses sema3Aa, 3Fa, 3Fb, and 3Gb. Thus, sema3s are spatiotemporally placed to influence RGC axon growth. Developmental Dynamics 236:2918,2924, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Homer proteins shape Xenopus optic tectal cell dendritic arbor development in vivo

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 11 2008
    Kendall R. Van Keuren-Jensen
    Abstract Considerable evidence suggests that the Homer family of scaffolding proteins contributes to synaptic organization and function. We investigated the role of both Homer 1b, the constitutively expressed, and developmentally regulated form of Homer, and Homer 1a, the activity-induced immediate early gene, in dendritic arbor elaboration and synaptic function of developing Xenopus optic tectal neurons. We expressed exogenous Homer 1a or Homer 1b in developing Xenopus tectal neurons. By collecting in vivo time lapse images of individual, EGFP-labeled and Homer-expressing neurons over 3 days, we found that Homer 1b leads to a significant decrease in dendritic arbor growth rate and arbor size. Synaptic transmission was also altered in developing neurons transfected with Homer 1b. Cells expressing exogenous Homer 1b over 3 days had a significantly greater AMPA to NMDA ratios, and increased AMPA mEPSC frequency. These data suggest that increasing Homer 1b expression increases excitatory synaptic inputs, increases synaptic maturation, and slows dendritic arbor growth rate. Exogenous Homer 1a expression increases AMPA mEPSC frequency, but did not significantly affect tectal cell dendritic arbor development. Changes in the ratio of Homer 1a to Homer 1b may signal the neuron that overall activity levels in the cell have changed, and this in turn could affect protein interactions at the synapse, synaptic transmission, and structural development of the dendritic arbor. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2008. [source]


    Neural agrin increases postsynaptic ACh receptor packing by elevating rapsyn protein at the mouse neuromuscular synapse

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 9 2008
    Jennifer Brockhausen
    Abstract Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments at neuromuscular junctions in the mouse tibialis anterior muscle show that postsynaptic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) become more tightly packed during the first month of postnatal development. Here, we report that the packing of AChRs into postsynaptic aggregates was reduced in 4-week postnatal mice that had reduced amounts of the AChR-associated protein, rapsyn, in the postsynaptic membrane (rapsyn+/, mice). We hypothesize that nerve-derived agrin increases postsynaptic expression and targeting of rapsyn, which then drives the developmental increase in AChR packing. Neural agrin treatment elevated the expression of rapsyn in C2 myotubes by a mechanism that involved slowing of rapsyn protein degradation. Similarly, exposure of synapses in postnatal muscle to exogenous agrin increased rapsyn protein levels and elevated the intensity of anti-rapsyn immunofluorescence, relative to AChR, in the postsynaptic membrane. This increase in the rapsyn-to-AChR immunofluorescence ratio was associated with tighter postsynaptic AChR packing and slowed AChR turnover. Acute blockade of synaptic AChRs with ,-bungarotoxin lowered the rapsyn-to-AChR immunofluorescence ratio, suggesting that AChR signaling also helps regulate the assembly of extra rapsyn in the postsynaptic membrane. The results suggest that at the postnatal neuromuscular synapse agrin signaling elevates the expression and targeting of rapsyn to the postsynaptic membrane, thereby packing more AChRs into stable, functionally-important AChR aggregates. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2008 [source]


    Parasitoid wasp sting: A cocktail of GABA, taurine, and ,-alanine opens chloride channels for central synaptic block and transient paralysis of a cockroach host

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2006
    Eugene L. Moore
    Abstract The wasp Ampulex compressa injects venom directly into the prothoracic ganglion of its cockroach host to induce a transient paralysis of the front legs. To identify the biochemical basis for this paralysis, we separated venom components according to molecular size and tested fractions for inhibition of synaptic transmission at the cockroach cercal-giant synapse. Only fractions in the low molecular weight range (<2 kDa) caused synaptic block. Dabsylation of venom components and analysis by HPLC and MALDI-TOF-MS revealed high levels of GABA (25 mM), and its receptor agonists ,-alanine (18 mM), and taurine (9 mM) in the active fractions. Each component produces transient block of synaptic transmission at the cercal-giant synapse and block of efferent motor output from the prothoracic ganglion, which mimics effects produced by injection of whole venom. Whole venom evokes picrotoxin-sensitive chloride currents in cockroach central neurons, consistent with a GABAergic action. Together these data demonstrate that Ampulex utilizes GABAergic chloride channel activation as a strategy for central synaptic block to induce transient and focal leg paralysis in its host. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2006 [source]


    Development and topography of the lateral olfactory tract in the mouse: Imaging by genetically encoded and injected fluorescent markers

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2006
    Andreas Walz
    Abstract In mammals, conventional odorants are detected by OSNs located in the main olfactory epithelium of the nose. These neurons project their axons to glomeruli, which are specialized structures of neuropil in the olfactory bulb. Within glomeruli, axons synapse onto dendrites of projection neurons, the mitral and tufted (M/T) cells. Genetic approaches to visualize axons of OSNs expressing a given odorant receptor have proven very useful in elucidating the organization of these projections to the olfactory bulb. Much less is known about the development and connectivity of the lateral olfactory tract (LOT), which is formed by axons of M/T cells connecting the olfactory bulb to central neural regions. Here, we have extended our genetic approach to mark M/T cells of the main olfactory bulb and their axons in the mouse, by targeted insertion of IRES-tauGFP in the neurotensin locus. In NT-GFP mice, we find that M/T cells of the main olfactory bulb mature and project axons as early as embryonic day 11.5. Final innervation of central areas is accomplished before the end of the second postnatal week. M/T cell axons that originate from small defined areas within the main olfactory bulb, as visualized by localized injections of fluorescent tracers in wild-type mice at postnatal days 1 to 3, follow a dual trajectory: a branch of tightly packed axons along the dorsal aspect of the LOT, and a more diffuse branch along the ventral aspect. The dorsal, but not the ventral, subdivision of the LOT exhibits a topographical segregation of axons coming from the dorsal versus ventral main olfactory bulb. The NT-GFP mouse strain should prove useful in further studies of development and topography of the LOT, from E11.5 until 2 weeks after birth. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2006 [source]


    Synaptic plasticity and functionality at the cone terminal of the developing zebrafish retina

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2003
    Oliver Biehlmaier
    Abstract Previous studies have analyzed photoreceptor development, some inner retina cell types, and specific neurotransmitters in the zebrafish retina. However, only minor attention has been paid to the morphology of the synaptic connection between photoreceptors and second order neurons even though it represents the transition from the light sensitive receptor to the neuronal network of the visual system. Here, we describe the appearance and differentiation of pre- and postsynaptic elements at cone synapses in the developing zebrafish retina together with the maturation of the directly connecting second order neurons and a dopaminergic third order feedback-neuron from the inner retina. Zebrafish larvae were examined at developmental stages from 2 to 7dpf (days postfertilization) and in the adult. Synaptic maturation at the photoreceptor terminals was examined with antibodies against synapse associated proteins. The appearance of synaptic plasticity at the so-called spinule-type synapses between cones and horizontal cells was assessed by electron microscopy, and the maturation of photoreceptor downstream connection was identified by immunocytochemistry for GluR4 (AMPA-type glutamate receptor subunit), protein kinase ,1 (mixed rod-cone bipolar cells), and tyrosine hydroxylase (dopaminergic interplexiform cells). We found that developing zebrafish retinas possess first synaptic structures at the cone terminal as early as 3.5dpf. Morphological maturation of these synapses at 3.5,4dpf, together with the presence of synapse associated proteins at 2.5dpf and the maturation of second order neurons by 5dpf, indicate functional synaptic connectivity and plasticity between the cones and their second order neurons already at 5dpf. However, the mere number of spinules and ribbons at 7dpf still remains below the adult values, indicating that synaptic functionality of the zebrafish retina is not entirely completed at this stage of development. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 56: 222,236, 2003 [source]


    Drosophila neuromuscular synapse assembly and function require the TGF-, type I receptor saxophone and the transcription factor Mad

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2003
    Joel M. Rawson
    Abstract Transforming growth factor-,s (TGF-,) comprise a superfamily of secreted proteins with diverse functions in patterning and cell division control. TGF-, signaling has been implicated in synapse assembly and plasticity in both vertebrate and invertebrate systems. Recently, wishful thinking, a Drosophila gene that encodes a protein related to BMP type II receptors, has been shown to be required for the normal function and development of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). These findings suggest that a TGF-,-related ligand activates a signaling cascade involving type I and II receptors and the Smad family of transcription factors to orchestrate the assembly of the NMJ. Here we demonstrate that the TGF-, type I receptor Saxophone and the downstream transcription factor Mothers against dpp (Mad) are essential for the normal structural and functional development of the Drosophila NMJ, a synapse that displays activity-dependent plasticity. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 55: 134,150, 2003 [source]


    GABAergic modulation of primary gustatory afferent synaptic efficacy

    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
    Andrew A. Sharp
    Abstract Modulation of synaptic transmission at the primary sensory afferent synapse is well documented for the somatosensory and olfactory systems. The present study was undertaken to test whether GABA impacts on transmission of gustatory information at the primary afferent synapse. In goldfish, the vagal gustatory input terminates in a laminated structure, the vagal lobes, whose sensory layers are homologous to the mammalian nucleus of the solitary tract. We relied on immunoreactivity for the GABA-transporter, GAT-1, to determine the distribution of GABAergic synapses in the vagal lobe. Immunocytochemistry showed dense, punctate GAT-1 immunoreactivity coincident with the layers of termination of primary afferent fibers. The laminar nature and polarized dendritic structure of the vagal lobe make it amenable to an in vitro slice preparation to study early synaptic events in the transmission of gustatory input. Electrical stimulation of the gustatory nerves in vitro produces synaptic field potentials (fEPSPs) predominantly mediated by ionotropic glutamate receptors. Bath application of either the GABAA receptor agonist muscimol or the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen caused a nearly complete suppression of the primary fEPSP. Coapplication of the appropriate GABAA or GABAB receptor antagonist bicuculline or CGP-55845 significantly reversed the effects of the agonists. These data indicate that GABAergic terminals situated in proximity to primary gustatory afferent terminals can modulate primary afferent input via both GABAA and GABAB receptors. The mechanism of action of GABAB receptors suggests a presynaptic locus of action for that receptor. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 52: 133,143, 2002 [source]


    Sustained LFA-1 cluster formation in the immune synapse requires the combined activities of L -plastin and calmodulin

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 9 2010
    Guido H. Wabnitz
    Abstract Formation of immune synapses (IS) between T cells and APC requires multiple rearrangements in the actin cytoskeleton and selective receptor accumulation in supramolecular activation clusters (SMAC). The inner cluster (central SMAC) contains the TCR/CD3 complex. The outer cluster (peripheral SMAC) contains the integrin LFA-1 and Talin. Molecular mechanisms selectively stabilizing receptors in the IS remained largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that sustained LFA-1 clustering in the IS is a consequence of the combined activities of the actin-bundling protein L -plastin (LPL) and calmodulin. Thus, upon antigen-recognition of T cells, LPL accumulated predominantly in the peripheral SMAC. siRNA-mediated knock-down of LPL led to a failure of LFA-1 and Talin redistribution , however, not TCR/CD3 relocalization , into the IS. As a result of this LPL knock-down, the T-cell/APC interface became smaller over time and T-cell proliferation was inhibited. Importantly, binding of calmodulin to LPL was required for the maintenance of LPL in the IS and consequently inhibition of calmodulin also prevented stable accumulation of LFA-1 and Talin, but not CD3, in the IS. [source]


    PPP1R9B (Neurabin 2): Involvement and dynamics in the NK immunological synapse

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
    Xiaobo Meng
    Abstract The NK immunological synapse (NKIS) is a dynamic structure dependent on the assembly of membrane, cytoskeletal and signaling components. These serve to focus and generate stimuli for adhesion and orientation of the cytoskeleton for targeted cytolytic granule release. Previous studies have demonstrated the importance of the cytoskeleton in these processes. We previously identified PPP1R9B (neurabin 2, spinophilin) as a cytoskeletal component of the NK-like cell line YTS. We demonstrate that (i) PPP1R9B gradually accumulates at the NKIS in a maturation stage-dependent manner; (ii) it mimics the early kinetics of actin recruitment to the NKIS but it precedes actin departure from the site; (iii) it is recruited by CD18 stimulation but not by CD28 ligation; (iv) it is required for the maintenance of the cortical F-actin organization in the YTS cells and knocking down PPP1R9B reduces the frequency of YTS,target cell conjugation, possibly due to the collapsed F-actin cytoskeleton in these cells. These results indicate that PPP1R9B is required for synapse formation in the NK cells and suggest that it may be involved in the maintenance of cellular architecture by regulation of actin assembly, possibly acting to stabilize the NKIS until granule release is eminent. [source]


    Cover Picture , Eur.

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 7 2006

    The cover has been specifically designed to introduce the 16th European Congress of Immunology. It combines a picture of the Eiffel Tower with a fluorescence microscopy image of immune cells, underlining the immunological research that will be discussed at the meeting. The immunofluorescence staining shows B lymphocytes (CD45 in red, IgM in blue) forming an immunological synapse with an antigen presenting cell (ICAM-1 in green) and was kindly provided by Yolanda Carrasco, Cancer Research UK, London. [source]


    Multifocal structure of the T cell , dendritic cell synapse

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 6 2005
    Cédric Brossard
    Abstract The structure of immunological synapses formed between murine naive T cells and mature dendritic cells has been subjected to a quantitative analysis. Immunofluorescence images of synapses formed in the absence of antigen show a diffuse synaptic accumulation of CD3 and LFA-1. In electron microscopy, these antigen-free synapses present a number of tight appositions (cleft size ,15,nm), all along the synapse. These tight appositions cover a significantly larger surface fraction of antigen-dependent synapses. In immunofluorescence, antigen-dependent synapses show multiple patches of CD3 and LFA-1 with a variable overlap. A similar distribution is observed for PKC, and talin. A concentric organization characteristic of prototypical synapses is rarely observed, even when dendritic cells are paralyzed by cytoskeletal poisons. In T,DC synapses, the interaction surface is composed of several tens of submicronic contact spots, with no large-scale segregation of CD3 and LFA-1. As a comparison, in T,B synapses, a central cluster of CD3 is frequently observed by immunofluorescence, and electron microscopy reveals a central tight apposition. Our data show that it is inappropriate to consider the concentric structure as a "mature synapse" and multifocal structures as immature. [source]


    Vav1 transduces TCR signals required for LFA-1 function and cell polarization at the immunological synapse

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 3 2003
    Laurence Ardouin
    Abstract Activation of T lineage cells through the TCR by peptide,MHC complexes on APC is critically dependent on rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton. Vav1 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for members of the Rho/Rac family of GTPases which is activated following TCR stimulation, suggesting that it may transduce TCR signals to the activation of some or all actin-controlled processes. Weshow that Vav1-deficient double-positive thymocytes are less efficient at forming conjugates with APC presenting agonist peptide than wild-type cells are. Furthermore we demonstrate that Vav1 is required for TCR-induced activation of the integrin LFA-1, which is likely to explain the defect in conjugate formation. However, once Vav1-deficient cells form a conjugate, the assembly of proteins into an immunological synapse at the conjugate interface is normal. In contrast, thymocyte polarization is defective in the absence of Vav1, as judged by the relocalization of the microtubule-organizing center. These data demonstrate that Vav1 transduces signals to only a subset of cytoskeleton-dependent events at the immunological synapse. [source]


    Secreted TARSH regulates olfactory mitral cell dendritic complexity

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 6 2009
    Ting-Wen Cheng
    Abstract Olfactory sensory neurons synapse with mitral cells to form stereotyped connections in the olfactory bulb (OB). Mitral cell apical dendrites receive input from olfactory sensory neurons expressing the same odorant receptor. During development, this restricted dendritic targeting of mitral cells is achieved through eliminating elaborated dendritic trees to a single apical dendrite. Through a genome-wide microarray screen, we identified TARSH (Target of NESH SH3) as a transiently expressed molecule in mitral cells during the dendritic refinement period. TARSH expression is restricted to pyramidal neurons along the main olfactory pathway, including the anterior olfactory nucleus and piriform cortex. The dynamic TARSH expression is not altered when odor-evoked activity is blocked by naris closure or in AC3 knockout mice. We also demonstrate that TARSH is a secreted protein. In dissociated OB cultures, secreted TARSH promotes the reduction of mitral cell dendritic complexity and restricts dendritic branching and outgrowth of interneurons. Dendritic morphological changes were also observed in mitral cells overexpressing TARSH themselves. We propose that TARSH is part of the genetic program that regulates mitral cell dendritic refinement. [source]


    A novel role for MNTB neuron dendrites in regulating action potential amplitude and cell excitability during repetitive firing

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2008
    Richardson N. Leão
    Abstract Principal cells of the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) are simple round neurons that receive a large excitatory synapse (the calyx of Held) and many small inhibitory synapses on the soma. Strangely, these neurons also possess one or two short tufted dendrites, whose function is unknown. Here we assess the role of these MNTB cell dendrites using patch-clamp recordings, imaging and immunohistochemistry techniques. Using outside-out patches and immunohistochemistry, we demonstrate the presence of dendritic Na+ channels. Current-clamp recordings show that tetrodotoxin applied onto dendrites impairs action potential (AP) firing. Using Na+ imaging, we show that the dendrite may serve to maintain AP amplitudes during high-frequency firing, as Na+ clearance in dendritic compartments is faster than axonal compartments. Prolonged high-frequency firing can diminish Na+ gradients in the axon while the dendritic gradient remains closer to resting conditions; therefore, the dendrite can provide additional inward current during prolonged firing. Using electron microscopy, we demonstrate that there are small excitatory synaptic boutons on dendrites. Multi-compartment MNTB cell simulations show that, with an active dendrite, dendritic excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) elicit delayed APs compared with calyceal EPSCs. Together with high- and low-threshold voltage-gated K+ currents, we suggest that the function of the MNTB dendrite is to improve high-fidelity firing, and our modelling results indicate that an active dendrite could contribute to a ,dual' firing mode for MNTB cells (an instantaneous response to calyceal inputs and a delayed response to non-calyceal dendritic excitatory postsynaptic potentials). [source]


    Contribution of NMDA receptor NR2B subunit to synaptic plasticity during associative learning in behaving rats

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 3 2007
    Mauricio Valenzuela-Harrington
    Abstract The difference in the amounts of NR2 subunits contained in NMDA receptors of the hippocampus has been related to their different involvement in activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. Here, we show that Ro 25-6981, a high-affinity and selective blocker of NMDA receptors containing NR2B subunits, is able to block the acquisition of a trace conditioning paradigm in adult rats, a task that requires the active participation of hippocampal circuits. Reconditioning with the same trace paradigm was also prevented by Ro 25-6981. In addition, we show that the slope of monosynaptic field excitatory postsynaptic potentials evoked at the dentate gyrus by single pulses presented to the medial perforant pathway increases significantly across conditioning sessions and during reconditioning, in a linear relationship with the increase in the number of classically conditioned eyelid responses. Administration of Ro 25-6981 prevented these learning-related changes in synaptic strength at the perforant pathway,dentate granule cell synapse. The present results suggest the involvement of NR2B-containing NMDA receptors in hippocampal functions related to both associative learning and activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. [source]


    Depression of retinogeniculate synaptic transmission by presynaptic D2 -like dopamine receptors in rat lateral geniculate nucleus

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2006
    G. Govindaiah
    Abstract Extraretinal projections onto neurons in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) play an important role in modifying sensory information as it is relayed from the visual thalamus to neocortex. The dLGN receives dopaminergic innervation from the ventral tegmental area; however, the role of dopamine in synaptic transmission in dLGN has not been explored. In the present study, whole cell recordings were obtained to examine the actions of dopamine on glutamatergic synaptic transmission. Dopamine (2,100 µm) strongly suppressed excitatory synaptic transmission in dLGN relay neurons that was evoked by optic tract stimulation and mediated by both N -methyl- d -aspartate and non -N -methyl- d -aspartate glutamate receptors. In contrast, dopamine did not alter inhibitory synaptic transmission arising from either dLGN interneurons or thalamic reticular nucleus neurons. The suppressive action of dopamine on excitatory synaptic transmission was mimicked by the D2 -like dopamine receptor agonist bromocriptine (2,25 µm) but not by the D1 -like receptor agonist SKF38393 (10,25 µm). In addition, the dopamine-mediated suppression was antagonized by the D2 -like receptor antagonist sulpiride (10,20 µm) but not by the D1 -like receptor antagonist SCH23390 (5,25 µm). The dopamine-mediated decrease in evoked excitatory postsynaptic current amplitude was accompanied by an increase in the magnitude of paired-pulse depression. Furthermore, dopamine also reduced the frequency but not the amplitude of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents. Taken together, these data suggest that dopamine may act presynaptically to regulate the release of glutamate at the retinogeniculate synapse and modify transmission of visual information in the dLGN. [source]


    Melatonin inhibits hippocampal long-term potentiation

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 9 2005
    Louisa M. Wang
    Abstract The goal of this study is to investigate the effect of the hormone melatonin on long-term potentiation and excitability measured by stimulating the Schaffer collaterals and recording the field excitatory postsynaptic potential from the CA1 dendritic layer in hippocampal brain slices from mice. Application of melatonin produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of the induction of long-term potentiation, with a concentration of 100 nm producing an ,,50% inhibition of long-term potentiation magnitude. Long-duration melatonin treatments of 6 h were also effective at reducing the magnitude of long-term potentiation. Melatonin (100 nm) did not alter baseline evoked responses or paired-pulse facilitation recorded at this synapse. The inhibitory actions of melatonin were prevented by application of the melatonin (MT) receptor antagonist luzindole as well as the MT2 receptor subtype antagonist 4-phenyl-2-propionamidotetraline. These inhibitory actions of melatonin were lost in mice deficient in MT2 receptors but not those deficient in MT1 receptors. In addition, application of the protein kinase A inhibitor H-89 both mimicked the effects of melatonin and precluded further inhibition by melatonin. Finally, the application an activator of adenylyl cyclase, forskolin, overcame the inhibitory effects of melatonin on LTP without affecting the induction of long-term potentiation on its own. These results suggest that hippocampal synaptic plasticity may be constrained by melatonin through a mechanism involving MT2-receptor-mediated regulation of the adenylyl cyclase,protein kinase A pathway. [source]


    Fear learning induces persistent facilitation of amygdala synaptic transmission

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 7 2005
    Bradley W. Schroeder
    Abstract In the maintenance phase of fear memory, synaptic transmission is potentiated and the stimulus requirements and signalling mechanisms are altered for long-term potentiation (LTP) in the cortico-lateral amygdala (LA) pathway. These findings link amygdala synaptic plasticity to the coding of fear memories. Behavioural experiments suggest that the amygdala serves to store long-term fear memories. Here we provide electrophysiological evidence showing that synaptic alterations in rats induced by fear conditioning are evident in vitro 10 days after fear conditioning. We show that synaptic transmission was facilitated and that high-frequency stimulation dependent LTP (HFS,LTP) of the cortico-lateral amygdala pathway remained attenuated 10 days following fear conditioning. Additionally, we found that the low-frequency stimulation dependent LTP (LFS,LTP) measured 24 h after fear conditioning was absent 10 days post-training. The persistent facilitation of synaptic transmission and occlusion of HFS,LTP suggests that, unlike hippocampal coding of contextual fear memory, the cortico-lateral amygdala synapse is involved in the storage of long-term fear memories. However, the absence of LFS,LTP 10 days following fear conditioning suggests that amygdala physiology 1 day following fear learning may reflect a dynamic state during memory stabilization that is inactive during the long-term storage of fear memory. Results from these experiments have significant implications regarding the locus of storage for maladaptive fear memories and the synaptic alterations induced by these memories. [source]


    Effects of variability in anatomical reconstruction techniques on models of synaptic integration by dendrites: a comparison of three internet archives

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2004
    Tibor Szilágyi
    Abstract The first step in building a realistic computational neuron model is to produce a passive electrical skeleton on to which active conductances can be grafted. For this, anatomically accurate morphological reconstructions of the desired cell type are required. In this study compartmental models were used to compare from a functional perspective three on-line archives of rat hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cell morphologies. The topological organization of cells was found to be similar for all archives, but several morphometric differences were observed. The three-dimensional size of the cells, the diameter and tortuosity of dendrites, and the electrotonic length of the main apical dendrite and of the branches in stratum lacunosum moleculare were dissimilar. The experimentally measured kinetics of somatically recorded inhibitory postsynaptic currents evoked in the stratum lacunosum moleculare (data from the literature) could be reproduced only using the archives that contained cells with an electrotonically short main apical dendrite. In the amplitude attenuation of the simulated postsynaptic currents and the voltage escape from the command potential under voltage clamp conditions, a two- to three-fold difference was observed among archives. Upon activation of a single model synapse on distal branches, cells with low dendritic diameter showed a voltage escape larger than 15 mV. The diameter of the dendrites influenced greatly the results, emphasizing the importance of methods that allow an accurate measurement of this parameter. Our results indicate that there are functionally significant differences in the morphometric data available in different archives even if the cell type, brain region and species are the same. [source]


    Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors regulate the frequency,response function of hippocampal CA1 synapses for the induction of LTP and LTD

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 1 2004
    Els J. M. Van Dam
    Abstract Synaptically released glutamate binds to ionotropic or metabotropic glutamate receptors. Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) are G-protein-coupled receptors and can be divided into three subclasses (Group I,III) depending on their pharmacology and coupling to signal transduction cascades. Group I mGluRs are coupled to phospholipase C and are implicated in several important physiological processes, including activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, but their exact role in synaptic plasticity remains unclear. Synaptic plasticity can manifest itself as an increase or decrease of synaptic efficacy, referred to as long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD). The likelihood, degree and direction of the change in synaptic efficacy depends on the history of the synapse and is referred to as ,metaplasticity'. We provide direct experimental evidence for an involvement of group I mGluRs in metaplasticity in CA1 hippocampal synapses. Bath application of a low concentration of the specific group I agonist 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG), which does not affect basal synaptic transmission, resulted in a leftward shift of the frequency,response function for the induction of LTD and LTP in naïve synapses. DHPG resulted in the induction of LTP at frequencies which induced LTD in control slices. These alterations in the induction of LTD and LTP resemble the metaplastic changes observed in previously depressed synapses. In addition, in the presence of DHPG additional potentiation could be induced after LTP had apparently been saturated. These findings provide strong evidence for an involvement of group I mGluRs in the regulation of metaplasticity in the CA1 field of the hippocampus. [source]


    Modulation of ACh release by presynaptic muscarinic autoreceptors in the neuromuscular junction of the newborn and adult rat

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 1 2003
    Manel M. Santafé
    Abstract We studied the presynaptic muscarinic autoreceptor subtypes controlling ACh release and their relationship with voltage-dependent calcium channels in the neuromuscular synapses of the Levator auris longus muscle from adult (30,40 days) and newborn (3,6 and 15 days postnatal) rats. Using intracellular recording, we studied how several muscarinic antagonists affected the evoked endplate potentials. In some experiments we previously incubated the muscle with calcium channel blockers (nitrendipine, ,-conotoxin-GVIA and ,-Agatoxin-IVA) before determining the muscarinic response. In the adult, the M1 receptor-selective antagonist pirenzepine (10 µm) reduced evoked neurotransmission (, 47%). The M2 receptor-selective antagonist methoctramine (1 µm) increased the evoked release (, 67%). Both M1- and M2-mediated mechanisms depend on calcium influx via P/Q-type synaptic channels. We found nothing to indicate the presence of M3 (4-DAMP-sensitive) or M4 (tropicamide-sensitive) receptors in the muscles of adult or newborn rats. In the 3,6-day newborn rats, pirenzepine reduced the evoked release (, 30%) by a mechanism independent of L-, N- and P/Q-type calcium channels, and the M2 antagonist methoctramine (1 µm) unexpectedly decreased the evoked release (, 40%). This methoctramine effect was a P/Q-type calcium-channel-dependent mechanism. However, upon maturation in the first two postnatal weeks, the M2 pathway shifted to perform the calcium-dependent release-inhibitory activity found in the adult. We show that the way in which M1 and M2 muscarinic receptors modulate neurotransmission can differ between the developing and adult rat neuromuscular synapse. [source]


    Differential Ca2+ -dependence of transmitter release mediated by P/Q- and N-type calcium channels at neonatal rat neuromuscular junctions

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2002
    Marcelo D. Rosato-Siri
    Abstract N- and P/Q-type voltage dependent calcium channels (VDCCs) mediate transmitter release at neonatal rat neuromuscular junction (NMJ). Thus the neonatal NMJ allows an examination of the coupling of different subtypes of VDCCs to the release process at a single synapse. We studied calcium dependence of transmitter release mediated by each channel by blocking with ,-conotoxin GVIA the N-type channel or with ,-agatoxin IVA the P/Q-type channel while changing the extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]o). Transmitter release mediated by P/Q-type VDCCs showed steeper calcium dependence than N-type mediated release (average slope 3.6 ± 0.09 vs. 2.6 ± 0.03, respectively). Loading the nerve terminals with 10 µm BAPTA-AM in the extracellular solution reduced transmitter release and occluded the blocking effect of ,-conotoxin GVIA (blockade ,2 ± 9%) without affecting the action of ,-agatoxin IVA (blockade 85 ± 4%). Both VDCC blockers were able to reduce the amount of facilitation produced by double-pulse stimulation. In these conditions facilitation was restored by increasing [Ca2+]o. The facilitation index (fi) was also reduced by loading nerve terminals with 10 µm BAPTA-AM (fi = 1.2 ± 0.1). The control fi was 2.5 ± 0.1. These results show that P/Q-type VDCCs were more efficiently coupled to neurotransmitter release than were N-type VDCCs at the neonatal neuromuscular junction. This difference could be accounted for by a differential location of these channels at the release site. In addition, our results indicate that space,time overlapping of calcium domains was required for facilitation. [source]


    NMDA receptor subunits GluR,1, GluR,3 and GluR,1 are enriched at the mossy fibre,granule cell synapse in the adult mouse cerebellum

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 11 2001
    Kazuyuki Yamada
    Abstract Cerebellar N -methyl- d -aspartate (NMDA) receptors are concentrated in the granular layer and are involved in motor coordination and the induction of long-term potentiation at mossy fibre,granule cell synapses. In the present study, we used immunohistochemistry to examine the distribution of NMDA receptor subunits in the adult mouse cerebellum. We found that appropriate pepsin pretreatment of sections greatly enhanced the sensitivity and specificity of immunohistochemical detection. As a result, intense immunolabelling for GluR,1 (NR2A), GluR,3 (NR2C), and GluR,1 (NR1) all appeared in synaptic glomeruli of the granular layer. Double immunofluorescence showed that these subunits were colocalized in individual synaptic glomeruli. Within the glomerulus, NMDA receptor subunits were located between centrally-located huge mossy fibre terminals and peripherally-located tiny Golgi axon terminals. By immunoelectron microscopy, all three subunits were detected at the postsynaptic junction in granule cell dendrites, forming synapses with mossy fibre terminals. Consistent with the known functional localization, GluR,1, GluR,3, and GluR,1 are, thus, anatomically concentrated at the mossy fibre,granule cell synapse. By contrast, immunohistochemical signals were very low in Purkinje cell somata and dendrites in the molecular layer. The lack of GluR,1 immunolabelling in Purkinje cells was unexpected because the cells express GluR,1 mRNA at high levels and high levels of GluR,1 protein in the molecular layer were revealed by immunoblot. As Purkinje cells are exceptionally lacking GluR, expression, the discrepant result may provide in vivo evidence suggesting the importance of accompanying GluR, subunits in synaptic localization of GluR,1. [source]


    Deficient long-term synaptic depression in the rostral cerebellum correlated with impaired motor learning in phospholipase C ,4 mutant mice

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 10 2001
    Mariko Miyata
    Abstract Long-term depression (LTD) at parallel fibre,Purkinje cell synapse of the cerebellum is thought to be a cellular substrate for motor learning. LTD requires activation of metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 1 (mGluR1) and its downstream signalling pathways, which invariably involves phospholipase C,s (PLC,s). PLC,s consist of four isoforms (PLC,1,4) among which PLC,4 is the major isoform in most Purkinje cells in the rostral cerebellum (lobule 1 to the rostral half of lobule 6). We studied mutant mice deficient in PLC,4, and found that LTD was deficient in the rostral but not in the caudal cerebellum of the mutant. Basic properties of parallel fibre,Purkinje cell synapses and voltage-gated Ca2+ channel currents appeared normal. The mGluR1-mediated Ca2+ release induced by repetitive parallel fibre stimulation was absent in the rostral cerebellum of the mutant, suggesting that their LTD lesion was due to the defect in the mGluR1-mediated signalling in Purkinje cells. Importantly, the eyeblink conditioning, a simple form of discrete motor learning, was severely impaired in PLC,4 mutant mice. Wild-type mice developed the conditioned eyeblink response, when pairs of the conditioned stimulus (tone) and the unconditioned stimulus (periorbital shock) were repeatedly applied. In contrast, PLC,4 mutant mice could not learn the association between the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli, although their behavioural responses to the tone or to the periorbital shock appeared normal. These results strongly suggest that PLC,4 is essential for LTD in the rostral cerebellum, which may be required for the acuisition of the conditioned eyeblink response. [source]


    Differential targeting of components of the dystrophin complex to the postsynaptic membrane

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2001
    Sophie Marchand
    Abstract Accumulating evidence points to the participation of dystroglycan in the clustering of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction [Côtéet al.. (1999) Nature Genet., 3, 338,342]. Dystroglycan is part of a multimolecular complex, either associated with dystrophin (the dystrophin-associated protein complex) at the sarcolemma or with utrophin (the utrophin-associated protein complex) at the neuromuscular junction. Understanding the assembly of this complex at the developing synapse led us to investigate, in Torpedo electrocyte, the intracellular routing and the targeting of several of its components, including dystroglycan, syntrophin, dystrophin and dystrobrevin. We previously demonstrated that acetylcholine receptors and rapsyn, the 43-kDa receptor-associated protein at the synapse, are cotargeted to the postsynaptic membrane via the exocytic pathway [Marchand et al.. (2000) J. Neurosci., 20, 521,528]. Using cell fractionation, immunopurification and immuno-electron microscope techniques, we show that ,-dystroglycan, an integral glycoprotein that constitutes the core of the dystrophin-associated protein complex localized at the innervated membrane, is transported together with acetylcholine receptor and rapsyn in post-Golgi vesicles en route to the postsynaptic membrane. Syntrophin, a peripheral cytoplasmic protein of the complex, associates initially with these exocytic vesicles. Conversely, dystrophin and dystrobrevin were absent from these post-Golgi vesicles and associate directly with the postsynaptic membrane. This study provides the first evidence for a separate targeting of the various components of the dystrophin-associated protein complex and a step-by-step assembly at the postsynaptic membrane. [source]


    Heterogeneous distribution of AMPA glutamate receptor subunits at the photoreceptor synapses of rodent retina

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 1 2001
    Iris Hack
    Abstract In the retina the segregation of different aspects of visual information starts at the first synapse in signal transfer from the photoreceptors to the second-order neurons, via the neurotransmitter glutamate. We examined the distribution of the four AMPA glutamate receptor subunits GluR1,GluR4 at the photoreceptor synapses in mouse and rat retinae by light and immunoelectron microscopy and serial section reconstructions. On the dendrites of OFF-cone bipolar cells, which make flat, noninvaginating contacts postsynaptic at cone synaptic terminals, the subunits GluR1 and GluR2 were predominantly found. Horizontal cell processes postsynaptic at both rod and cone synaptic terminals preferentially expressed the subunits GluR2, GluR2/3 and GluR4. An intriguing finding was the presence of GluR2/3 and GluR4 subunits on dendrites of putative rod bipolar cells, which are thought to signal through the sign-inverting metabotropic glutamate receptor 6, mGluR6. Furthermore, at the rod terminals, horizontal cell processes and rod bipolar cell dendrites showed labelling for the AMPA receptor subunits at the ribbon synaptic site or perisynaptically at their site of invagination into the rod terminal. The wide distribution of AMPA receptor subunits at the photoreceptor synapses suggests that AMPA receptors play an important role in visual signal transfer from the photoreceptors to their postsynaptic partners. [source]


    An Organic Nanoparticle Transistor Behaving as a Biological Spiking Synapse

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 2 2010
    Fabien Alibart
    Abstract Molecule-based devices are envisioned to complement silicon devices by providing new functions or by implementing existing functions at a simpler process level and lower cost, by virtue of their self-organization capabilities. Moreover, they are not bound to von Neuman architecture and this feature may open the way to other architectural paradigms. Neuromorphic electronics is one of them. Here, a device made of molecules and nanoparticles,a nanoparticle organic memory field-effect transistor (NOMFET),that exhibits the main behavior of a biological spiking synapse is demonstrated. Facilitating and depressing synaptic behaviors can be reproduced by the NOMFET and can be programmed. The synaptic plasticity for real-time computing is evidenced and described by a simple model. These results open the way to rate-coding utilization of the NOMFET in dynamical neuromorphic computing circuits. [source]