Zusammenfassung der Ressource
L-LTP
- Structural
- changes in existing spines
- increase in spine area
and the width
Anmerkungen:
- and the width of
the spine neck in the outer part of the molecular layer of the
dentate gyrus following tetanic stimulation of the perforant
path.
- -
Anmerkungen:
- A problem with this work is that no
recordings were made of evoked responses, so it is not possible
to be sure that LTP was in fact induced.
- increase in the length of the PSD
- increase in
cup-shaped spines
- spine densitiy-
Anmerkungen:
- LTP is not
associated with an overall change in spine density, either in the
dentate gyrus 6 hours after tetanus in vivo (Popov et al., 2004;
see Trommald et al., 1996 for a counter claim) or in area CA1
in vitro (2 hours after tetanus (Sorra and Harris, 1998).
- EM- spines with perforated PSD
Anmerkungen:
- increase in the proportion of spines that contained
perforated PSDs when synapses were labeled 30 minutes after
the induction of LTP, compared to the proportion in labeled
spines in naïve tissue or in spines examined 5 minutes after
LTP induction.
- early evidence- NOT changed
- no. of spines
- CA1,
Anmerkungen:
- In area CA1, Lynch’s group also saw no
change in spine density but detected a substantial increase
(35%) in the number of synapses—presumed inhibitory—on
dendritic shafts Lee et al., 1980
- green fluorescent protein and used
two-photon confocal microscopy
Anmerkungen:
- transfected CA1 pyramidal cells
in organotypic culture with green fluorescent protein and
used two-photon confocal microscopy to image synaptic
structures
- filopodia growth
Anmerkungen:
- Within a few minutes of applying localized tetanic
stimulation, they saw a rapid growth of filopodia-like structures
emanating from the dendrite; filopodia were not seen in
regions of the dendrite distant from the stimulating electrode
and were not produced by low-frequency stimulation.
- not correlated with
enhanced response
Anmerkungen:
- when new spines have been observed, it has not been
demonstrated that they contribute to the enhanced response
- Causally linked to LTP
Anmerkungen:
- strongest evidence that morphological changes are causally
linked to LTP because the increase in spine size occurred
immediately, was blocked by the same drugs that block the
induction of LTP, and was associated with an increase in the
response to uncaged glutamate
- electron microscopy
Anmerkungen:
- increase in the concentration of calcium that occurs in
spines following tetanic stimulation. The method depends on
precipitating calcium in smooth endoplasmic reticulum
(SER) and rendering it electron-dense
- Preceded by E-LTP
- When?
- When it is blocked by protein synthesis
inhibitors/ transcriptional blockers
- plateau after 1 to 2 hours
Anmerkungen:
- This reveals slow-onset potentiation rising from
baseline to reach a plateau after 1 to 2 hours. The slowly growing
L-LTP induced by BDNF (Fig. 10–2D) or cAMP analogues
has a similar time course.
- 1. initial L-LTP- dendritic protein synthesis
- translation/ protein synthesis
- protein synthesis inhibitors
- first evidence- Krug et al. (1984)
- protein synthesis inhibitors in-vivo
Anmerkungen:
- infused the protein synthesis inhibitor
anisomycin into the lateral ventricles of freely moving rats
and found that the potentiated fEPSP in the dentate gyrus
slowly declined to baseline over 3 to 5 hours. The baseline
response was not affected in control experiments. This result
appeared to establish an upper limit for the duration of posttranslational
changes.
- potentiated fEPSP declined
- CA1- in-vitro
- Mossy fiber
- block L-LTP induced by cAMP/ BDNF
- block LTD induced by
PP-LFS/ mGluR agonists
- protein synthesis in presynaptic neurons
- LTP-associated increase in a
number of presynaptic proteins
Anmerkungen:
- an LTP-associated increase in a number of presynaptic
proteins has been reported following the induction of
LTP in perforant path-granule cell synapses (Kelly et al.,
2000)
- preexisting mRNA in the dendrites
Anmerkungen:
- The rapid effect of translational inhibitors suggests that the
initial phase of L-LTP is dependent on protein synthesis from
preexisting mRNA in the dendrites of potentiated synapses
- +
- isolated dendrites
can support L-LTP
Anmerkungen:
- The demonstration that isolated dendrites of CA1 pyramidal
cells can support BDNF-induced LTP and mGluR-dependent
LTD provides direct evidence that dendritic protein synthesis
is sufficient to support persistent synaptic plasticity (Kang and
Schuman, 1996; Hüber et al., 2000); in both cases the effects
are blocked by protein synthesis inhibitors
- blocked by protein
synthesis inhibitors
- dendritic application of a
protein synthesis inhibitor
Anmerkungen:
- reduces
L-LTP in intact slices
- mRNA, translation machinery and proteins
invovled in induction present in detrides
Anmerkungen:
- among them CaMKII, PKMζ arc/arg3.1,
BNDF and its receptor trkB, and AMPA receptor subunits
GluR1 and GluR2
- decay of tetanus induced LTP in isolated
dendrites hastened by protein synthesis
inhibitors
Anmerkungen:
- Tetanus-induced
LTP lasting a number of hours also occurs in isolated dendrites,
and its decay is hastened by protein synthesis inhibitors
(Frey et al., 1989). These experiments demonstrate that translation
of existing dendritic mRNA can support a component
of L-LTP that extends well beyond the duration of E-LTP.
- -
- isolated dendrites
don't support L-LTP
- 2. persistent late phase- transcription
- evidence for role of transcriptional factors
- inhibitors
- CA1- invitro
Anmerkungen:
- DG in vivo
Anmerkungen:
- Mossy fiber
Anmerkungen:
- L-LTP induced by cAMP/ BDNF
- block by inhibitors
- upregultaion of immediate early genes
Anmerkungen:
- upregulation of immediate early genes such as c-fos,
zif268, and arc/arg3.1 reveal a correlation between transcription
and LTP induction
- mutant mouse with targeted inactivation of the
immediate early gene and transcription factor zif268
Anmerkungen:
- The absence of L-LTP in the dentate gyrus confirms a causal role for gene
transcription in the induction of L-LTP
- antisense mRNA to arc/arg3.1
Anmerkungen:
- transcription before translation
Anmerkungen:
- Local protein synthesis alone
cannot account for the observation that plasticity can be modulated
in this associative manner by a geographically distant
pathway; there has to be a transcriptional or translational signal
from the soma that either supplies the required stabilizing
proteins or transcripts or stimulates local protein synthesis to
do so.
- time-window
- 1-2 hours after L-LTP
Anmerkungen:
- The
effect of transcriptional inhibitors is delayed, beginning 1 to 2
hours after induction.
- transcriptional inhibitors- delayed affect
- signal- triggers mRNA transcription
Anmerkungen:
- The delay is consistent with a model in
which a signal from stimulated synapses is transported to the
nucleus, where it triggers transcription of new mRNA species.
The products of transcription, whether mRNA transcripts
themselves or the proteins they encode, are delivered to dendrites
to stabilize LTP at potentiated synapses.
- 3. signalling between soma and dendrite
- long-range activation of
nuclear transcription factors
Anmerkungen:
- What is
the signal, and how is it conveyed to the nucleus?
- CREB- target for kinases- role
- see signalling cascades
- genetically hypomorphic CREB mice
Anmerkungen:
- supported the
idea that CREB was important for LTP as well as for hippocampus-
dependent memory (Bourtchuladze et al., 1994).
- CREB knockout mice
- failed to detect a
robust effect on
LTP
Anmerkungen:
- could be explained by the upregulation of other members
of the CREB family
- CREB knockout- all isoforms absent
Anmerkungen:
- generated
a mouse in which expression of all CREB isoforms was
either absent or limited, and found no effect on L-LTP
- no affect on LTP
- targets of CREB
- c-fos- transcription of BDNF
- zif268
- arc/arg3.1
- 80
Anmerkungen:
- coding for: neurotransmitters
and peptides (n 35), growth factors and their
receptors (n 7), structure-related proteins (n 4), proteins
involved in cellular metabolism (n16), transcription factors
(n 13), signal transduction proteins (n 8).
- Ca- activated signalling
Anmerkungen:
- How is the signalling achieved?
- 1. Ca-calmodulin- travels to some and
activates kinases
Anmerkungen:
- calcium is released
from the endoplasmic reticulum as a traveling wave proceeding
from dendrite to soma, where it binds to nuclear calmodulin
to activate target kinases (Hardingham et al., 2001).
- 2. calcium/calmodulin translocates
from synapse to nucleus
Anmerkungen:
- Calcium is released fro the ER binds to calmodulin, and translocates to the nucleus like that
- 3. Ca2 enters the nucleus via voltagegated calcium
channels in the somatic plasma membrane
- requires postsynaptic
antidromic APs
- Kinase targets for ca-calmodulin
- CaMKIV- location- nuclear
Anmerkungen:
- a member of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent
kinase family whose location is predominantly nuclear (Lonze
and Ginty, 2002).
- activation allows binding to
CREB and initiate transcription
- Ras/MAP kinase
- activated by intra Ca- via tyrosine
kinase receptors/ G-protein
- stimulating gene
expression in the nucleus
- MEK
Anmerkungen:
- Synaptic
activity leads to the phosphorylation of ERK1, 2 in both dendrites
and soma. As with the calmodulin signal, the mechanism
by which the activated ERK signal is translocated to the
nucleus is not known.Although phospho-ERK does not phosphorylate
CREB, inhibition of MEK, the kinase that phosphorylates
ERK, prevents phosphorylation of CREB on ser133.
There must therefore be intermediate kinase(s) that are
substrates for phospho-ERK and allow it control over
CREB phosphorylation; these intermediates are thought to be
members of the RSK or MSK families of nuclear kinases
- intermediate- RSK or MSK families of
nuclear kinases??
- ERK1/2 phospho
- CREB phosphorylation
- inhibition- prevents CREB phospho
- PKA pathways
- G-protein- D1/D5 dopamine receptors
- DA anta/ agonsits
Anmerkungen:
- Late LTP in area CA1 is blocked by dopamine antagonists
(Frey et al., 1990) and facilitated by D1/D5 agonists
- cAMP>> PKA>> CREB
Anmerkungen:
- Dopamine receptor activation leads to upregulation
of cAMP and presumptive translocation of activated PKA
to the soma, where it can directly phosphorylate CREB on
ser133 (Lonze and Ginty, 2002).
- Problems with synapse-soma signalling
- reaching a viable conc in nucleus
Anmerkungen:
- how does the signal generated by
one or a few potentiated synapses (in the limit, a single
synapse) located at any position on the dendritic tree reach a
concentration in the nucleus that allows activation of transcription
factors?
- Action Potential Signaling
- Evidence
- Antidromic APs-
convert E-LTP to L-LTP
Anmerkungen:
- Antidromically driven action potentials can induce expression
of immediate early genes, and antidromic stimulation of CA1
axons converts E-LTP to L-LTP, suggesting that action potentials
can induce expression of soma-to-synapse plasticity factors
(Dudek and Fields, 2002).
- HFS of NMDAR- drives a
synapse to soma signal
Anmerkungen:
- synaptic activation of NMDA receptors during highfrequency
stimulation can drive somatic action potentials and
so provide a rapid NMDAR-dependent signal from synapse to
soma (Herron et al, 1986).
- synaptic NMDAR activation-
somatic Ca entry
Anmerkungen:
- synaptic activation of
NMDA receptors can lead to somatic Ca2 entry via L-type
voltage-gated Ca2 channels (Alford et al, 1993).
- strong induction protocols-
NMDAR-independent L-LTP
Anmerkungen:
- strong induction protocols that induce NMDAR-independent
L-LTP in area CA1 also lead to a large somatic Ca2 signal that
is blocked by L-type Ca2 channel inhibitors (Raymond and
Redman, 2006).
- large somatic Ca2 signal that
is blocked by L-type Ca2
channel inhibitors
- How does the signal read there so quickly?
Anmerkungen:
- transcription of immediate early
genes such as c-fos and zif268 begins within a few minutes of
LTP induction.
- Action Potential Signaling
Anmerkungen:
- Because action
potential(s) generally (though not always, see Section 10.3.6)
occur during the induction of LTP, the nuclear signal could in principle be generated by Ca2 entering through somatic
voltage-gated channels.
- Ca entry in the soma>> activate
transcriptional mechanisms
Anmerkungen:
- activated by action potentials
- how specific genes are targeted by
different stimuli if the same signal
cascades are engaged in each case.
- different combinations of kinases
Anmerkungen:
- is likely that different combinations of kinases are activated
by different stimuli and that expression of specific target
genes is achieved by combinatorial selection from the cell’s
portfolio of transcription factors
- e.g. immediate early gene c-fos
Anmerkungen:
- transcription
of the immediate early gene c-fos can be triggered by any one
of several stimuli (growth factors, neuromodulators, neurotransmitters),
all of which lead to phosphorylation of CREB
on serine 133
- Neurotransmitters- increase Ca- CRF- CREB
Anmerkungen:
- CRF- calcium response factor
CREB- phosphorylation
of CREB at ser141and ser143; phosphorylation at
the latter two serine residues reduces the ability of ser133
phospho-CREB to bind to CBP.
- CRF and CREB phosphorylated at ser141
and ser143 but unassociated with CBP
- transcription of BDNF
- immediate early gene zif268
- requires: CREB and Elk1 activation
- 4. Immediate early genes
Anmerkungen:
- immediate early genes (IEGs) whose transcription is
upregulated by activity without the need for prior protein
synthesis.
- c-fos
- occurs within minutes of induction
- zif268,
- mRNA occurs within minutes of induction
Anmerkungen:
- Enhanced mRNA expression for both c-fos and
zif268 occurs within minutes
of induction and peaks around 30 minutes after induction,
returning to baseline levels within 2 to 4 hours
- Expression of proteins
lags by 1 to 2 hours.
- arc/arg3.1
- Evidence for role in LTP
- upregulation of IEGs
following LTP induction in DG
Anmerkungen:
- in the sense that whenever a stimulus is sufficiently
strong to induce L-LTP immediate early gene expression is
triggered.
- block induction of LTP-
block IEG expression
- inactivation of zif268- block
L-LTP but not E-LTP
- -
- IEG expression- induced by
non-LTP protocols
Anmerkungen:
- enhanced expression of transcription factors such as
zif268 and c-fos can be induced by procedures that do not
induce LTP, such as nonsynaptic excitation of neurons by
antidromic stimulation. The mechanical disturbance involved
in cutting a hippocampal slice can also induce long-lasting
upregulation of IEG expression in the dentate gyrus (French
et al., 2001).
- DG vs CA1
- not readily switched on by
LTPinducing stimulation in
area CA1
- CA1 expressing arc/arg3.1 mRNA
Anmerkungen:
- there is an increase in the number of pyramidal
neurons in area CA1 expressing arc/arg3.1 mRNA following
exposure to a novel environment (Guzowski et al., 1999).
- IEG- mainly
upregulated in
teh DG
- time window
Anmerkungen:
- The existence of this time window
implies that the synthesis of the proteins necessary to support
L-LTP occurs at the time of or soon after the tetanus and that
thereafter new protein synthesis is not required, even though
expression of L-LTP can take some hours to reach its maximum
and is then maintained at that level
- inital L-LTP
- Drugs effective only during or
immediately after LTP induction
- Drugs ineffective once
LTP is established
- behavioral experiments
- protein synthesis inhibitors during
learning- block long-term but not
short-term memory
Anmerkungen:
- protein synthesis
inhibitors are given around the time of one-trial learning;
short-term memory is unaffected by the inhibitors, and longterm
memory is blocked(Squire and Barondes, 1972).
- memory reconsolidation
- 4. signaling from Nucleus to Synapse
- TAGS-
Anmerkungen:
- recognized by the mRNA or protein
products that are transported into dendrites from the soma.
- lifetime
Anmerkungen:
- This tag must have a lifetime at least long enough to engage
with the newly generated mRNA or proteins
- 1. protein synthesis-independent.
Anmerkungen:
- If this were the case, a
tetanus to one pathway should still generate L-LTP even in the
presence of a protein synthesis inhibitor if a second pathway
was tetanized within a time window of 1 to 2 hours on either
side of the tetanus to the first pathway. The tag would be set in
the first pathway, notwithstanding the presence of the protein
synthesis inhibitor, and would capture the plasticity-related
proteins generated by the second pathway.
- associativity
Anmerkungen:
- Equally arresting was
the demonstration that E-LTP, produced by a tetanus that
by itself was too weak to produce L-LTP, could be converted to
L-LTP by a preceding or subsequent strong tetanus given to a
second pathway within a similar time window
- the weak stimuli- below the threshold to trigger
protein synthesis, but to create a TAG
- criteria
- (1) tags are generated by an activity-
dependent, NMDAR-dependent, but
protein synthesisindependent process
- (2) they have a lifetime of 1 to 2 hours but are
susceptible to cancelation by LFS
within the first few minutes of being set
- (3) at least two tags can be set, one induced by activity
patterns that produce early or late LTP and LTD
- (4) tags are input-specific;
- (5) tags interact with proteins generated by de novo nuclear
transcription (the process of “synaptic capture”) to trigger
the conversion of early to late LTP or early to late LTD
- LTP- protein kinases- PKA
- LTD- protein phosphotases
- Important events
- lead to long-term tags created and
via synaptic capture
Anmerkungen:
- via tagging and synaptic capture, with all
other pathways carrying information about events of minor
significance occurring an hour or two on either side of the
significant event
- 2 hour lag
Anmerkungen:
- Transcriptional
inhibitors given at the time of induction can take 2 hours or
more to begin to affect LTP
- The relative delay in the action
of transcriptional inhibitors presumably reflects the time
taken for a signal to pass from synapse to nucleus for transcription
first of IEGs and then of genes encoding effector
proteins, followed by transport of mRNA and/or proteins into
dendrites and their postulated capture by tagged spines
- time for synapse-some,
some-synapse transport