Seeman Stephanie C, Mogen Brian J, Fetz Eberhard E, Perlmutter Steve I
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Washington National Primate Research Center.
Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Feb 15;37(7):1935-1949. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2046-16.2017. Epub 2017 Jan 16.
Classic studies have described spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) at a synapse: the connection from neuron A to neuron B is strengthened (or weakened) when A fires before (or after) B within an optimal time window. Accordingly, more recent works have demonstrated behavioral effects consistent with an STDP mechanism; however, many relied on single-unit recordings. The ability to modify cortical connections becomes useful in the context of injury, when connectivity and associated behavior are compromised. To avoid the need for long-term, stable isolation of single units, one could control timed activation of two cortical sites with paired electrical stimulation. We tested the hypothesis that STDP could be induced via prolonged paired stimulation as quantified by cortical evoked potentials (EPs) in the sensorimotor cortex of awake, behaving monkeys. Paired simulation between two interconnected sites produced robust effects in EPs consistent with STDP, but only at 2/15 tested pairs. The stimulation protocol often produced increases in global network excitability or depression of the conditioned pair. Together, these results suggest that paired stimulation is a viable method to induce STDP between cortical populations, but that factors beyond activation timing must be considered to produce conditioning effects. Plasticity of neural connections is important for development, learning, memory, and recovery from injury. Cellular mechanisms underlying spike-timing-dependent plasticity have been studied extensively Recent work has demonstrated results consistent with the previously defined cellular mechanisms; however, the output measure in these studies was typically an indirect assessment of plasticity at the neural level. Here, we show direct plasticity in recordings of neuronal populations in awake, behaving nonhuman primates induced by paired electrical stimulation. In contrast to studies, we found that plastic effects were only produced between specific cortical areas. These findings suggest that similar mechanisms drive plasticity and , but that cortical architecture may contribute significantly to site-dependent effects.
经典研究描述了突触处的尖峰时间依赖性可塑性(STDP):当神经元A在最佳时间窗口内先于(或后于)神经元B放电时,从神经元A到神经元B的连接会增强(或减弱)。相应地,最近的研究已经证明了与STDP机制一致的行为效应;然而,许多研究依赖于单神经元记录。在损伤的情况下,当连接性和相关行为受到损害时,改变皮质连接的能力就变得很有用。为了避免长期、稳定地分离单神经元的需要,可以通过成对电刺激来控制两个皮质位点的定时激活。我们测试了这样一个假设,即通过长时间的成对刺激可以诱导STDP,这可以通过清醒、行为活跃的猴子感觉运动皮质中的皮质诱发电位(EPs)来量化。两个相互连接位点之间的成对刺激在EPs中产生了与STDP一致的强大效应,但仅在15对测试对中的2对中出现。刺激方案常常会导致整体网络兴奋性增加或条件对的抑制。总之,这些结果表明,成对刺激是在皮质群体之间诱导STDP的一种可行方法,但必须考虑激活时间之外的因素才能产生条件效应。神经连接的可塑性对于发育、学习、记忆和损伤恢复很重要。尖峰时间依赖性可塑性的细胞机制已经得到了广泛研究。最近的研究已经证明了与先前定义的细胞机制一致的结果;然而,这些研究中的输出测量通常是对神经水平可塑性的间接评估。在这里,我们展示了在清醒、行为活跃的非人类灵长类动物中,由成对电刺激诱导的神经元群体记录中的直接可塑性。与其他研究不同,我们发现可塑性效应仅在特定的皮质区域之间产生。这些发现表明,类似的机制驱动可塑性,但皮质结构可能对位点依赖性效应有显著贡献。