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Neural Plasticity: Long-term Potentiation. Lesson 15. Neural Plasticity. Nervous System is malleable learning occurs Structural changes at synapses Changes in synaptic efficiency Long-term potentiation Long-term depression LTP & LTD throughout brain Many different mechanisms ~.
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Neural Plasticity:Long-term Potentiation Lesson 15
Neural Plasticity • Nervous System is malleable • learning occurs • Structural changes at synapses • Changes in synaptic efficiency • Long-term potentiation • Long-term depression • LTP & LTD throughout brain • Many different mechanisms ~
Neural Mechanism of Memory • Donald Hebb • Short-term Memory • Change in neural activity • not structural • temporary • Reverberatory Circuits - • cortical loops of activity ~
Reverberating Loops • Maintains neural activity for a period • Activity decays ~
Hebb’s Postulate • Long-Term Memory • required structural change in brain • relatively permanent • Hebb Synapse • use strengthens synaptic efficiency • concurrent activity required • pre- & postsynaptic neurons ~
Long-term Potentiation • According to Hebb rule • use strengthens synaptic connection • Synaptic facilitation • Structural changes • Simultaneous activity • Experimentally produced • hippocampal slices • associative learning also ~
Inducing LTP Stimulating electrode Record Presynapticneuron Postsynapticneuron
Postsynaptic Potential • Single Stimulation (AP) • High frequency stimulation • Single stimulation + -70mv -
Experimentally-induced LTP • Pattern Of Stimulation • Brief, high frequency stimulation • > 10 Hz (10 AP/sec) • LTP Duration • Hippocampal slices: 40 hours • Intact animals: Up to a year ~
LTP & Associative Learning • Associative learning • Respondent & Operant learning • Strengthening of association • Strong link: US Response (UR) • Weak link: CS Response (CR) • Concurrent activity • CS, US Response • LTP in CS (strengthened)~
LTP: Associative • Before Learning • Stim S AP in R • W1 or W2 no AP in R W1 W1 R S US S W2 W2
LTP: Associative • Induction • Paired: S + W1 AP • LTP in W1 • Unpaired: W2 no AP W1 W1 R S US S W2 W2
LTP: Associative • After LTP • W1 alone AP in R • W2 alone no AP in R W1 W1 R S US S W2 W2
LTP: Molecular Mechanisms • Presynaptic & Postsynaptic changes • HC Glutamate • excitatory • 2 postsynaptic receptor subtypes • AMPA Na+ • NMDA Ca++ • Glu ligand for both ~
NMDA Receptor • N-methyl-D-aspartate • Glu binding opens channel? • required, but not sufficient • Membrane must be depolarized • before Glu binds ~
Single Action Potential • Glu AMPA • a-amino-3-hydroxyl-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate • depolarization • Glu NMDA • does not open • Mg++ blocks channel • Little Ca++ into postsynaptic cell • Followed by more APs ~
Mg Ca++ Na+ G G G G AMPA NMDA
Mg Ca++ Na+ G G G G AMPA NMDA
Mg Ca++ Na+ G G G G AMPA NMDA
Mg Ca++ Na+ G G G G AMPA NMDA
Activation of NMDA-R • Ca++ channel • chemically-gated • voltage-gated • Mg++ blocks channel • Ca++ influx post-synaptic changes • strengthens synapse ~
Ca2+-mediated Effects • Activation of protein kinases • Protein Kinase C (PKC) • Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) • Targets: AMPA-R & other signaling proteins • CaMKII important role • Block CaMKII No LTP • Self-phosphorylation LTP duration ~
LTP: Postsynaptic Changes • Receptor synthesis • More synapses • Shape of dendritic spines • Nitric Oxide synthesis ~
Before LTP Presynaptic Axon Terminal Dendritic Spine
After LTP less Fodrin Less resistance Presynaptic Axon Terminal Dendritic Spine
Nitric Oxide - NO • Retrograde messenger • Hi conc. poisonous gas • Hi lipid solubility • storage? • Synthesis on demand • Ca++ NO synthase NO • Increases NT synthesis in presynaptic neuron • more released during AP ~
Glu cGMP NO NOS NO Ca++ G G G G Ca++