Larson John, Munkácsy Erin
Psychiatric Institute, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60612, United States.
Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies, Department of Cell and Structural Biology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78245, United States.
Brain Res. 2015 Sep 24;1621:38-50. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2014.10.034. Epub 2014 Oct 27.
This review covers the spatial and temporal rules governing induction of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) by theta-burst stimulation. Induction of LTP in field CA1 by high frequency stimulation bursts that resemble the burst discharges (complex-spikes) of hippocampal pyramidal neurons involves a multiple-step mechanism. A single burst is insufficient for LTP induction because it evokes both excitatory and inhibitory currents that partially cancel and limit postsynaptic depolarization. Bursts repeated at the frequency (~5 Hz) of the endogenous theta rhythm induce maximal LTP, primarily because this frequency disables feed-forward inhibition and allows sufficient postsynaptic depolarization to activate voltage-sensitive NMDA receptors. The disinhibitory process, referred to as "priming", involves presynaptic GABA autoreceptors that inhibit GABA release. Activation of NMDA receptors allows a calcium flux into dendritic spines that serves as the proximal trigger for LTP. We include new data showing that theta-burst stimulation is more efficient than other forms of stimulation for LTP induction. In addition, we demonstrate that associative interactions between synapses activated during theta-bursts are limited to major dendritic domains since such interactions occur within apical or basal dendritic trees but not between them. We review evidence that recordings of electrophysiological responses during theta burst stimulation can help to determine if experimental manipulations that affect LTP do so by affecting events antecedent to the induction process, such as NMDA receptor activation, or downstream signaling cascades that result from postsynaptic calcium fluxes. Finally, we argue that theta-burst LTP represents a minimal model for stable, non-decremental LTP that is more sensitive to a variety of experimental manipulations than is LTP induced by other stimulation paradigms. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled SI: Brain and Memory.
本综述涵盖了由θ波爆发刺激诱导海马体长期增强(LTP)的时空规则。通过类似于海马体锥体神经元爆发放电(复合锋电位)的高频刺激脉冲在CA1区诱导LTP涉及一个多步骤机制。单个脉冲不足以诱导LTP,因为它会引发兴奋性和抑制性电流,这些电流会部分抵消并限制突触后去极化。以内源性θ节律的频率(约5Hz)重复的脉冲诱导最大LTP,主要是因为这个频率会使前馈抑制失效,并允许足够的突触后去极化来激活电压敏感性NMDA受体。这种去抑制过程,称为“引发”,涉及抑制GABA释放的突触前GABA自身受体。NMDA受体的激活允许钙流入树突棘,这是LTP的近端触发因素。我们纳入了新数据,表明θ波爆发刺激在诱导LTP方面比其他形式的刺激更有效。此外,我们证明了在θ波爆发期间激活的突触之间的联合相互作用仅限于主要的树突域,因为这种相互作用发生在顶树突或基底树突内,而不是它们之间。我们回顾了证据,表明在θ波爆发刺激期间记录电生理反应有助于确定影响LTP的实验操作是通过影响诱导过程之前的事件(如NMDA受体激活),还是通过影响突触后钙通量导致的下游信号级联反应来实现的。最后,我们认为θ波爆发LTP代表了一种稳定、非递减LTP的最小模型,它比其他刺激范式诱导的LTP对各种实验操作更敏感。本文是名为“SI:大脑与记忆”的特刊的一部分。