Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA.
Nature. 2012 Feb 19;483(7387):92-5. doi: 10.1038/nature10844.
Many lines of evidence suggest that memory in the mammalian brain is stored with distinct spatiotemporal patterns. Despite recent progresses in identifying neuronal populations involved in memory coding, the synapse-level mechanism is still poorly understood. Computational models and electrophysiological data have shown that functional clustering of synapses along dendritic branches leads to nonlinear summation of synaptic inputs and greatly expands the computing power of a neural network. However, whether neighbouring synapses are involved in encoding similar memory and how task-specific cortical networks develop during learning remain elusive. Using transcranial two-photon microscopy, we followed apical dendrites of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the motor cortex while mice practised novel forelimb skills. Here we show that a third of new dendritic spines (postsynaptic structures of most excitatory synapses) formed during the acquisition phase of learning emerge in clusters, and that most such clusters are neighbouring spine pairs. These clustered new spines are more likely to persist throughout prolonged learning sessions, and even long after training stops, than non-clustered counterparts. Moreover, formation of new spine clusters requires repetition of the same motor task, and the emergence of succedent new spine(s) accompanies the strengthening of the first new spine in the cluster. We also show that under control conditions new spines appear to avoid existing stable spines, rather than being uniformly added along dendrites. However, succedent new spines in clusters overcome such a spatial constraint and form in close vicinity to neighbouring stable spines. Our findings suggest that clustering of new synapses along dendrites is induced by repetitive activation of the cortical circuitry during learning, providing a structural basis for spatial coding of motor memory in the mammalian brain.
许多证据表明,哺乳动物大脑中的记忆是以独特的时空模式存储的。尽管最近在识别参与记忆编码的神经元群体方面取得了进展,但突触水平的机制仍知之甚少。计算模型和电生理数据表明,沿着树突分支的突触功能聚类导致突触输入的非线性总和,并大大扩展了神经网络的计算能力。然而,相邻的突触是否参与编码类似的记忆,以及在学习过程中特定于任务的皮质网络如何发展,仍然难以捉摸。使用颅外双光子显微镜,我们在小鼠练习新的前肢技能时,跟踪了运动皮层第 5 层锥体神经元的顶树突。在这里,我们表明,学习获取阶段形成的三分之一新树突棘(大多数兴奋性突触的突触后结构)形成簇,并且大多数此类簇是相邻的树突棘对。与非聚类对应物相比,这些聚类的新树突棘更有可能在长时间的学习过程中持续存在,甚至在训练停止后很久也是如此。此外,新的树突棘簇的形成需要重复相同的运动任务,并且在簇中第一个新的树突棘增强的同时,会出现后续的新树突棘。我们还表明,在对照条件下,新树突棘似乎避免了现有的稳定树突棘,而不是沿着树突均匀添加。然而,簇中的后继新树突棘克服了这种空间限制,并在邻近的稳定树突棘附近形成。我们的研究结果表明,新突触沿着树突的聚类是由学习过程中皮质回路的重复激活诱导的,为哺乳动物大脑中运动记忆的空间编码提供了结构基础。