Keifer Joyce
Neuroscience Group, Division of Basic Biomedical Sciences, University of South Dakota School of Medicine, Vermillion, SD 57010, USA.
Cerebellum. 2003;2(1):55-61. doi: 10.1080/14734220310015610.
The classically conditioned eyeblink reflex is the best studied model for understanding the neural mechanisms that underlie learning and memory. Here, data from an in vitro model of the conditioned eyeblink reflex are summarized with the aim of shedding some light on potential cellular mechanisms that may underlie eyeblink classical conditioning. An isolated brainstem-cerebellum preparation from turtles was developed in which to study the synaptic circuitry of pathways involving the cerebellum, red nucleus and brainstem nuclei. A neural correlate of an eyeblink response recorded in the abducens nerve can be conditioned entirely in vitro by pairing trigeminal and auditory nerve stimulation. Conditioned abducens nerve responses (CRs) are not generated or sustained by unpaired stimuli and their long latencies, on the order of hundreds of milliseconds, support the interpretation that the CRs are not unconditioned responses. Ablation experiments show that CRs can be generated in brainstem preparations lacking a cerebellum or the medulla. However, the timing of the CRs are disrupted by removal of the cerebellar circuitry. Thus, a highly reduced in vitro brainstem preparation demonstrates acquisition of CRs but poor timing features. Recent experiments have focused on elucidating cellular mechanisms for CR acquisition in the brainstem blink circuitry. These studies show that NMDA-mediated synaptic mechanisms are required to generate CRs and that the level of conditioning is associated with the upregulation of GluR4-containing AMPA receptors in the abducens motor nuclei. Data from immunocytochemistry and physiological experiments using the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) inhibitor KN-93 suggest that CaMKII does not have a key role in mediating the induction or expression of abducens nerve CRs. It is hypothesized that GluR4-containing AMPA receptors in the abducens motor nuclei are targeted to auditory nerve synapses by an NMDA receptor-dependent process to strengthen the CS input during conditioning which results in the generation of CRs. Future studies will examine the synaptic localization of GluR4 and potential signal transduction pathways involved in in vitro conditioning. Moreover, the role feedback loops through the cerebellum and their role in CR timing will be a key issue to address using this preparation.
经典条件性眨眼反射是理解学习和记忆背后神经机制的研究最为深入的模型。在此,总结了来自条件性眨眼反射体外模型的数据,旨在阐明可能构成眨眼经典条件作用基础的潜在细胞机制。开发了一种来自海龟的离体脑干 - 小脑标本,用于研究涉及小脑、红核和脑干核团的通路的突触回路。在外展神经中记录到的眨眼反应的神经关联可以通过三叉神经和听神经刺激配对在完全体外条件下形成条件反射。未配对的刺激不会产生或维持条件性外展神经反应(CRs),并且它们数百毫秒量级的长潜伏期支持这样的解释,即CRs不是非条件反应。切除实验表明,在缺乏小脑或延髓的脑干标本中可以产生CRs。然而,CRs的时间安排会因去除小脑回路而受到干扰。因此,高度简化的体外脑干标本显示出CRs的获得,但时间特征较差。最近的实验集中在阐明脑干眨眼回路中CRs获得的细胞机制。这些研究表明,NMDA介导的突触机制是产生CRs所必需的,并且条件作用的程度与外展运动核中含GluR4的AMPA受体的上调有关。使用钙/钙调蛋白依赖性蛋白激酶II(CaMKII)抑制剂KN - 93进行的免疫细胞化学和生理学实验数据表明,CaMKII在介导外展神经CRs的诱导或表达中没有关键作用。据推测,外展运动核中含GluR4的AMPA受体通过NMDA受体依赖性过程靶向听神经突触,以在条件作用期间增强条件刺激输入,从而导致CRs的产生。未来的研究将检查GluR4的突触定位以及参与体外条件作用的潜在信号转导途径。此外,通过小脑的反馈回路的作用及其在CR时间安排中的作用将是使用该标本需要解决的关键问题。