Nelson P G, Fields R D, Yu C, Liu Y
National Institutes of Health, NICHD, Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
J Neurobiol. 1993 Nov;24(11):1517-30. doi: 10.1002/neu.480241106.
The effect of action potentials on elimination of mouse neuromuscular junctions (NMJ) was studied in a three-compartment cell culture preparation. Axons from superior cervical ganglion or ventral spinal cord neurons in two lateral compartments formed multiple neuromuscular junctions with muscle cells in a central compartment. The loss of synapses over a 2-7-day period was determined by serial electrophysiological recording and a functional assay. Electrical stimulation of axons from one side compartment during this period, using 30-Hz bursts of 2-s duration, repeated at 10-s intervals, caused a significant increase in synapse elimination compared to unstimulated cultures (p < 0.001). The extent of homosynaptic and heterosynaptic elimination was comparable, i.e., of the 226 functional synapses of each type studied, 111 (49%) of the synapses that had been stimulated were eliminated, and 87 (39%) of unstimulated synapses on the same muscle cells were eliminated. Also, simultaneous bilateral stimulation caused significantly greater elimination of synapses than unilateral stimulation (p < 0.005). These observations are contrary to the Hebbian hypothesis of synaptic plasticity. A spatial effect of stimulus-induced synapse elimination was also evident following simultaneous bilateral stimulation. Prior to stimulation, most muscle cells were innervated by axons from both side compartments, but after bilateral stimulation, muscle cells were predominantly unilaterally innervated by axons from the closer compartment. These experiments suggest that synapse elimination at the NMJ is an activity-dependent process, but it does not follow Hebbian or anti-Hebbian rules of synaptic plasticity. Rather, elimination is a consequence of postsynaptic activation and a function of location of the muscle cell relative to the neuron. An interaction between spatial and activity-dependent effects on synapse elimination could help produce optimal refinement of synaptic connections during postnatal development.
在三室细胞培养制备中研究了动作电位对小鼠神经肌肉接头(NMJ)消除的影响。来自两个外侧室的颈上神经节或腹侧脊髓神经元的轴突与中央室的肌肉细胞形成多个神经肌肉接头。通过系列电生理记录和功能测定来确定2 - 7天期间突触的丧失情况。在此期间,使用持续2秒、频率为30赫兹的脉冲串,以10秒的间隔重复刺激一侧室的轴突,与未刺激的培养物相比,突触消除显著增加(p < 0.001)。同突触和异突触消除的程度相当,即在所研究的每种类型的226个功能性突触中,受刺激的突触中有111个(49%)被消除,同一肌肉细胞上未受刺激的突触中有87个(39%)被消除。此外,双侧同时刺激导致的突触消除比单侧刺激显著更大(p < 0.005)。这些观察结果与突触可塑性的赫布假说相反。同时双侧刺激后,刺激诱导的突触消除的空间效应也很明显。在刺激之前,大多数肌肉细胞由来自两侧室的轴突支配,但双侧刺激后,肌肉细胞主要由来自较近室的轴突单侧支配。这些实验表明,NMJ处的突触消除是一个活动依赖的过程,但它不遵循突触可塑性的赫布或反赫布规则。相反,消除是突触后激活的结果以及肌肉细胞相对于神经元位置的函数。空间和活动依赖效应之间对突触消除的相互作用可能有助于在出生后发育过程中产生突触连接的最佳精细化。