Rex Christopher S, Kramár Enikö A, Colgin Laura L, Lin Bin, Gall Christine M, Lynch Gary
Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, University of California, Irvine, California 92697-4550, USA.
J Neurosci. 2005 Jun 22;25(25):5956-66. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0880-05.2005.
Memory loss in humans begins early in adult life and progresses thereafter. It is not known whether these losses reflect the failure of cellular processes that encode memory or disturbances in events that retrieve it. Here, we report that impairments in hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), a form of synaptic plasticity associated with memory, are present by middle age in rats but only in select portions of pyramidal cell dendritic trees. Specifically, LTP induced with theta-burst stimulation in basal dendrites of hippocampal field CA1 decayed rapidly in slices prepared from 7- to 10-month-old rats but not in slices from young adults. There were no evident age-related differences in LTP in the apical dendrites. Both the adenosine A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine and a positive AMPA receptor modulator (ampakine) offset age-related LTP deficits. Adenosine produced greater depression of synaptic responses in middle-aged versus young adult slices and in basal versus apical dendrites. These results were not associated with variations in A1 receptor densities and may instead reflect regional and age-related differences in adenosine clearance. Pertinent to this, brief applications of A1 receptor antagonists immediately after theta stimulation fully restored LTP in middle-aged rats. We hypothesize that the build-up of extracellular adenosine during theta activity persists into the postinduction period in the basal dendrites of middle-aged slices and thereby activates the A1 receptor-dependent LTP reversal effect. Regardless of the underlying mechanism, the present results provide a candidate explanation for memory losses during normal aging and indicate that, with regard to plasticity, different segments of pyramidal neurons age at different rates.
人类的记忆丧失在成年早期就开始了,并且此后还会继续发展。目前尚不清楚这些记忆丧失是反映了编码记忆的细胞过程的失败,还是检索记忆的事件受到了干扰。在此,我们报告称,海马体长期增强(LTP)功能受损,这是一种与记忆相关的突触可塑性形式,在中年大鼠中就已出现,但仅存在于锥体细胞树突分支的特定部分。具体而言,在海马体CA1区基底树突中通过theta爆发刺激诱导的LTP,在从7至10月龄大鼠制备的脑片中迅速衰减,但在年轻成年大鼠的脑片中则不会。顶端树突中的LTP没有明显的与年龄相关的差异。腺苷A1受体拮抗剂8-环戊基-1,3-二丙基黄嘌呤和一种阳性AMPA受体调节剂(安帕金)都能抵消与年龄相关的LTP缺陷。与年轻成年大鼠脑片相比,腺苷在中年大鼠脑片中对突触反应的抑制作用更强,并且在基底树突与顶端树突中也是如此。这些结果与A1受体密度的变化无关,而可能反映了腺苷清除的区域和年龄相关差异。与此相关的是,在theta刺激后立即短暂应用A1受体拮抗剂可完全恢复中年大鼠的LTP。我们推测,在theta活动期间细胞外腺苷的积累在中年脑片的基底树突诱导后阶段持续存在,从而激活了A1受体依赖性的LTP逆转效应。无论潜在机制如何,目前的结果为正常衰老过程中的记忆丧失提供了一个可能的解释,并表明就可塑性而言,锥体细胞的不同节段衰老速度不同。