Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Techniques in synaptic plasticity
- Electrophysiology
Anmerkungen:
- recording of changes in current OR voltage- in the postsynaptic cell usually in response to a stimulation protocol
- Extracellular
- How?
- populations of cells
Anmerkungen:
- used to record from populations of cells- filed EPDPs, compounds APs, synchronous oscillatory network activity
- single-cells
Anmerkungen:
- measures action potentials only
- (+) easier than intrace
Anmerkungen:
- easier than intracellular techniques or whole-cell patch clamping because there is less risk that the neurone will be damaged or lost because of mechanical movement
- in-vivo recordings
- As positive ions move into the cell, the
extracellular space becomes more negative
Anmerkungen:
- graph show depolarisation as going down
- graph does down
Anmerkungen:
- Considerations
- Intracellular
- Mainly in-vitro
Anmerkungen:
- acutely dissocated cells, neuronal cultures, brain slices
- in-vivo
Anmerkungen:
- usually in anaesthetised animals (difficult)- also in head-fixed awake animals (very difficult)
- Single-cell recordings
- intracellular sharp microelectrode recordings
- graph goes up
Anmerkungen:
- Current clamp
- How?
- records membrane
potential-voltage
- can inject current
Anmerkungen:
- to depolarise or hyperpolarise a cell
- graph goes down
Anmerkungen:
- goes down for an ion influx-
when plotting current- down will be an influx of ions
when plotting voltage- up will be an influx of ions
- Considerations
- Patch clamp
- configurations
- whole-cell
Anmerkungen:
- can be voltage-clamp or current-clamp mode
- cell attached
- inside-out/ outside-out
- Considerations
- Reductionist
Anmerkungen:
- studies shouldnt make grand claims of functional significance without corroboration from other experimental approaches that are more integrative
- Drugs
Anmerkungen:
- if drugs are used to block the action of ion channels that are not the focus of the study- it should be made sure that they dont alter the function of ion channels that ARE the focus of the study
- control- two drugs
Anmerkungen:
- with different selectivities- if the results are the same then it's not likely that they affect the target of interest
- Whole-cell
- intracellular properties
Anmerkungen:
- using patch pippetes changes the properties
- induction of LTP
Anmerkungen:
- sensitive to washout of intracellular components
- alternatives
- perforated patch
- sharp electrode
- Voltage clamp
- Temperature
Anmerkungen:
- most are done at room temperature which can alter the function
- Electrode resistance
Anmerkungen:
- Voltage error- when there are large currents, the voltage also increases (ohm's law) which means that the membrane potential might differ to the command potential applied to the cell
- voltage error
- monitor resistance
Anmerkungen:
- the higher the resistance the slower and smaller the recorded current becomes-
Don't record rapid membrane events because the membrane currents are being recorded
- space clamp errors
Anmerkungen:
- when recording from complex shaped cells- e.g. pyramidal cells, not all ion channels are optimally clamped so the current measured will not be completely representative of the true current
- Isolated patches
- sampling errors
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. ion channel distributions aren't even; ion channel activity not uniform; temporal considerations- during the time of recordings the ion channel activity may vary;
- Recording (amplifier) errors
Anmerkungen:
- Temporal resolution- channel currents might be very short (good papers will indicate the minimum open time, and estimate the proportion of events that have been excluded)
Amplitude resolution- not all currents might be identifiable
Such currents can be studied in the whole-cell configuration
- Voltage clamp
- Why?
Anmerkungen:
- ion channels have different properties at different membrane potentails
in current camp voltage varies so the properties of the channel change during the event
- graph goes up
Anmerkungen:
- goes up for an ion influx
- Patch-clamp
Anmerkungen:
- variation of voltage/current clamp that allows many types of cells to be voltage-clamped with one electrode
- two-electrode
Anmerkungen:
- control membrane
voltage- record current
Anmerkungen:
- 2 electrodes- one measures membrane potential, one injects current to control the voltage
- single-electode (SEVC)
Anmerkungen:
- was developed before patch-clamp technique was available
- considerations
- +
- (+) recording from deep layers of the brain
Anmerkungen:
- can enable voltage clamping ofcells that cannot be accessed by patch clamping
- (+) Minimal disruption to intracellular messenger systems
Anmerkungen:
- that may be critical for regulation of ionic mechanisms in cells
- -
- (-) can't clamp large currents
Anmerkungen:
- theres a limit to the amount of current that ca be passed by the electroge because of the high resistance of microelectrodes
- (-) clamping the microelectrode, but the preparation /cell
Anmerkungen:
- can result from a failure to recognize a necessary compromise between the speed of the clamp (maxim- switching faster is better) and the requirement for the electrical potential difference of the electrode to decay fully before the value of remaining potential (i.e. the potential of the impaled cell) is sampled and the switch is made to current passing (maxim= switching too fast is bad))
- errors from very large very fast currents
- experimenter should monitor the voltage
at the headset of the amplifier using an
oscilloscope
- indicators of poor clamping
- Na/ Ca channels- negative slope region of
current-voltage (I/V) relationship
Anmerkungen:
- poor clamping- there will be a sudden all or nothing increase in the amplitude of the inward current- which will show up as a very steep negative slope in the I/V relationship
- need long recovery time (>15min)
Anmerkungen:
- Some evidence of damage upon microelectrode penetration- SEVC
>>need longer recovery time (over 15 minutes)
- noise- no more than 1mV
Anmerkungen:
- check for a clean trace- no more than 1mV variation in resting membrane potential
- artefacts- due to electrode movement
- (-) APs are attenuated because of capacitance
- SEVC vs patch-clamo
Anmerkungen:
- APs more attenuated in SEVC- due to greater capacitance
Some evidence of damage upon microelectrode penetration- SEVC
>>need longer recovery time (over 15 minutes)
- Stimulate/ record from?
Anmerkungen:
- usually stimulate presynaptic, record postsynaptic neuron
- Preparations of brain slices
- in-vitro
- Dissociated/ organotypic
neuronal cultures
Anmerkungen:
- perinatal cultures, inappropriate hyperwired connected (may be hard to generalize), no anatomical correlate with CNS wiring in vivo
- Acute brain slices
Anmerkungen:
- Any age most local circuits intact, long range targets severed
- Living brain slice
Anmerkungen:
- This preparation allows ready access to
all pathways of the dentate gyrus and hippocampus, provides
mechanical stability for intracellular recording, and makes
possible rapid pharmacological manipulation of the extracellular
environment
- synaptosome
Anmerkungen:
- A synaptosome is an isolated synaptic terminal from a neuron. Synaptosomes are obtained by mild homogenization of nervous tissue under isotonic conditions and subsequent fractionation using differential and density gradient centrifugation
- in-vivo
- Whole animal
Anmerkungen:
- Any age; all circuits intact, can correlate behaviour with electrophysiology, technically very demanding, especially for cellular recording and freely moving animals
- plotting voltage
- up
Anmerkungen:
- plotting current
- down
Anmerkungen:
- Molecular
- Genetically modified mice
- transgenic
- knockouts/ knockins
- Cre-lox
- immunocytochemistry
- fluorescence imaging
of ion activity
- microinjection
of cDNA
Anmerkungen:
- to see the effect of a specif protein/ subunit?
- western bolt
- Detection of exocytosis
- measuring L-glutamate- in synaptic cleft
Anmerkungen:
- The studies that have measured
the gross amount of L-glutamate released cannot distinguish
between the mechanisms by which there was glutamate release- increase in no. of vesicles, Pr, etc or other alterations that affect the extracellular concentration of L-glutamate.
- (-) doesn't show how glutamate increases
- Stimulation protocols
- Paired-pulse stimulation
Anmerkungen:
- Protocol- Pairs of action potentials were elicited in the presynaptic cell with short depolarizing current pulses (each 10-20 ms duration, 0-2-
0 7 nA) separated by 20-3000 ms. Pairs of pulses were delivered at intervals of 7-10 s. Magnitude of responses are recorded in the postsynaptic neuron in response to both stimuli and are compared in the analysis
- The aftereffects on synaptic transmission of a single stimulus
can be tested by delivering a second stimulus at a variable time
after the first.
- two stimuli are delivered with an interval of,
say, 50 ms, and the amplitude of the first and second synaptic responses are compared. The
amplitude of the second response relative to the first (facilitation ratio) is then a reflection of
the increase in the probability of transmitter release (Pr).
- dentate gyrus in vivo
Anmerkungen:
- When pairs of stimuli are delivered to the perforant
path, the amplitude of the second response recorded in
the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus in vivo is typically
facilitated at interstimulus intervals of less than 200 to 300 ms
and depressed at longer intervals of up to a few seconds
(McNaughton, 1980
- Schaffer-commissural synapses
Anmerkungen:
- Similar effects are seen at
Schaffer-commissural synapses in area CA1 (Andersen, 1960).
- test for pre/ postsynaptic mechanism of LTP
- (-) suggestive but not conclusive
Anmerkungen:
- For example, no change in facilitation would be observed
if LTP resulted from recruitment of a population of silent
boutons (that is, boutons with zero probability of release
before the induction of LTP) that, following induction,
assumed a distribution of release probabilities similar to that
of the population activated before induction
- (+) Other tests
- fluorescence imaging
- exocytosis detection
- Drugs
- Genetically modified
- tests for LTP
- stimulation protocols
- high-frequency/ tetanus
Anmerkungen:
- stimulating the presynaptic neuron, and recording in the postsynaptic neuron- this will lead to neurotransmitter release and depolarisation in the postsynaptic neurons- Mg+ block removed
because NMDAR activation is slow you need to depolarise for a long time
- frequency of 100Hz
for 1 second
Anmerkungen:
- depolarising for a long time can induce LTP
- Theta burst stimulation (TBS)
- 5 bursts of 4 pulses at 100
Hz with 200ms break
between the bursts
- Hyman et al (2003)
Anmerkungen:
- when TBS was applied at the trough of theta EEG- LTD
at the peak- LTP
- Lever et al (2010)
Anmerkungen:
- investigated theta phase of firing in principal cells in subiculum and CA1 as rats foraged in familiar and novel environments. We found that the preferred theta phase of firing in CA1, but not subiculum, was shifted to a later phase of the theta cycle during environmental novelty. Furthermore, the amount of phase shift elicited by environmental change correlated with the extent of place cell remapping in CA1. Our results support a relationship between theta phase and novelty-induced plasticity in CA1
- Paired
Anmerkungen:
- pairing a stimulation of the presynaptic neuron with depolarisation of the postsynaptic neuron
- Spike timing-dependent
Anmerkungen:
- When did the stimulation arrive?
You stimulate the presynaptic and depolarise postsynaptic neurons at different time
e.g. Post before pre, or pre before post-
This will lead to either LTP (pre before post) or LTD (post before pre)
- Voltage clamp
- Current clamp
- Backpropagating
Anmerkungen:
- APs fires in the cell body also goes back up the dendrite towards the cell body, and interact with incoming inputs from presynaptic neurons
- Bi and Poo (1998)
- induces LTP/ LTD
Anmerkungen:
- depends on the depolarisation of the postsynaptic neuron- less Ca influx means that it won't remove the Mg block
- insilences silent synapses
Anmerkungen:
- Isaac et al (1995)
Anmerkungen:
- paired stimulation lead to release of neurotransmitter coupled with depol, which leads to the insertion of receptors in the postsynaptic density
- LTD- Nakamura et al (2011)
Anmerkungen:
- dependent on the Ca influx
- Wigström et al., 1986
Anmerkungen:
- even low-frequency stimuli could
induce LTP in single CA1 pyramidal cells if each stimulus was
given in conjunction with a strong depolarizing pulse
- whole-cell voltage clamp
- Considerations
- Theta vs high frequency
Anmerkungen:
- major factor controlling the magnitude of LTP is the number
of stimuli in a train rather than the pattern of stimulation
- Hernandez et al. (2005)
Anmerkungen:
- major factor controlling the magnitude of LTP is the number
of stimuli in a train rather than the pattern of stimulation
- difference in early phase, but not late phase LTP
- number of pulses determine long-term LTP
- primed-burst stimulation (PBS)
Anmerkungen:
- Low frequency stimulation (LFS)
- 1-3Hz
- Pharmacological
- Agonists
- Antagonists
- that activate upon
activation of a receptor
- APV/ DGG
- ligand-activated non-competitive antagonists
Anmerkungen:
- for example an antagonist that
- Ca-chelating agents
- uncaging
- Techniques for testing STP/ LTP
Anlagen:
- CONFOUNDING FACTORS
- Temperature (Hedrick and Waters, 2011)
- At 24-25C
- Intrinsic membrane
properties that increase
- Resting input resistance
- membrane time constant
- , curvature of the I–V relationship
- At 36-37C
- no difference in resting
membrane potential
- Stimulation protocol
- no. of pulses
- Plotting data
Anmerkungen:
- usually they plot the data using EPSPs, or amplitude of EPSCs; depol=up- easy to understand that way
- Voltage (mV)- EPSPs
- up=depol
- Current (pA)- EPSCs
- down=depol
- EPSCs amplitude- up=depol
- dots=APs
- % change in amplitude