Amaral Michelle D, Pozzo-Miller Lucas
Department of Neurobiology, McKnight Brain Institute, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.
Cellscience. 2009 Apr 27;5(4):19-25.
Dendritic spines, the postsynaptic compartments of most functional excitatory synapses in the Central Nervous System (CNS), are highly dynamic structures, having the ability to grow, change shape, or retract in response to varying levels of neuronal activity. This dynamic nature of spines allows modifications in brain circuitry and connectivity, thus participating in fundamental processes such as learning, recall, and emotional behaviors. Although many studies have characterized the precise molecular identities and signaling pathways by which spines initially form, little is known about the actual time course over which they mature into functional postsynaptic compartments of excitatory synapses. A recent publication in Neuron addresses this issue by studying dendritic spine growth in response to multiphoton glutamate uncaging, simultaneously monitoring the amplitudes of the resultant postsynaptic currents and intracellular Ca(2+) transients within individual spines in CA1 pyramidal neurons in organotypic cultures of postnatal hippocampal slices. The authors describe that dendritic spines are able to respond to glutamate shortly after their formation, leading to the conclusion that spine growth and glutamate receptor recruitment are closely coupled temporally. AMPA receptor-mediated currents exhibited similar amplitudes in newly formed spines compared with older, more mature spines when their volume was taken into account. In addition, NMDA receptor-mediated currents also appeared early after spine formation, although the amount of Ca(2+) entry through these receptors was significantly lower in newly formed spines compared to older, mature spines. Within just a couple of hours, these newly formed spines were contacted by presynaptic terminals, thus acquiring a morphological appearance indistinguishable from already existing mature excitatory synapses.
树突棘是中枢神经系统(CNS)中大多数功能性兴奋性突触的突触后结构,是高度动态的结构,能够根据神经元活动水平的变化而生长、改变形状或缩回。树突棘的这种动态特性允许大脑回路和连接性发生改变,从而参与学习、记忆和情感行为等基本过程。尽管许多研究已经描述了树突棘最初形成的精确分子特征和信号通路,但对于它们成熟为兴奋性突触的功能性突触后结构的实际时间进程却知之甚少。最近发表在《神经元》杂志上的一篇论文通过研究多光子谷氨酸解笼激发后树突棘的生长来解决这个问题,同时监测出生后海马切片器官型培养物中CA1锥体神经元单个树突棘内产生的突触后电流幅度和细胞内Ca(2+)瞬变。作者描述说,树突棘在形成后不久就能对谷氨酸作出反应,从而得出树突棘生长和谷氨酸受体募集在时间上紧密耦合的结论。当考虑到新形成的树突棘和更成熟的老树突棘的体积时,AMPA受体介导的电流在两者中表现出相似的幅度。此外,NMDA受体介导的电流在树突棘形成后也很早就出现了,尽管与成熟的老树突棘相比,新形成的树突棘通过这些受体进入的Ca(2+)量要少得多。在短短几个小时内,这些新形成的树突棘就被突触前终末接触,因此在形态上与已有的成熟兴奋性突触没有区别。