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1.
iScience ; 27(7): 110147, 2024 Jul 19.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38989463

RÉSUMÉ

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a universally fatal neurodegenerative disease with no cure. Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) have been implicated in its pathogenesis but their relevance to ALS is not fully understood. We examined bulk RNA-seq data from almost 2,000 ALS and unaffected control samples derived from the cortex and spinal cord. Using different methods of feature selection, including differential expression analysis and machine learning, we discovered that transcription of HERV-K loci 1q22 and 8p23.1 were significantly upregulated in the spinal cord of individuals with ALS. Additionally, we identified a subset of ALS patients with upregulated HERV-K expression in the cortex and spinal cord. We also found the expression of HERV-K loci 19q11 and 8p23.1 was correlated with protein coding genes previously implicated in ALS and dysregulated in ALS patients in this study. These results clarify the association of HERV-K and ALS and highlight specific genes in the pathobiology of late-stage ALS.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Apr 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38370637

RÉSUMÉ

Microelectrode array (MEA) recordings are commonly used to compare firing and burst rates in neuronal cultures. MEA recordings can also reveal microscale functional connectivity, topology, and network dynamics-patterns seen in brain networks across spatial scales. Network topology is frequently characterized in neuroimaging with graph theoretical metrics. However, few computational tools exist for analyzing microscale functional brain networks from MEA recordings. Here, we present a MATLAB MEA network analysis pipeline (MEA-NAP) for raw voltage time-series acquired from single- or multi-well MEAs. Applications to 3D human cerebral organoids or 2D human-derived or murine cultures reveal differences in network development, including topology, node cartography, and dimensionality. MEA-NAP incorporates multi-unit template-based spike detection, probabilistic thresholding for determining significant functional connections, and normalization techniques for comparing networks. MEA-NAP can identify network-level effects of pharmacologic perturbation and/or disease-causing mutations and, thus, can provide a translational platform for revealing mechanistic insights and screening new therapeutic approaches.

3.
Elife ; 112022 10 13.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36226826

RÉSUMÉ

A fundamental unresolved problem in neuroscience is how the brain associates in memory events that are separated in time. Here, we propose that reactivation-induced synaptic plasticity can solve this problem. Previously, we reported that the reinforcement signal dopamine converts hippocampal spike timing-dependent depression into potentiation during continued synaptic activity (Brzosko et al., 2015). Here, we report that postsynaptic bursts in the presence of dopamine produce input-specific LTP in mouse hippocampal synapses 10 min after they were primed with coincident pre- and post-synaptic activity (post-before-pre pairing; Δt = -20 ms). This priming activity induces synaptic depression and sets an NMDA receptor-dependent silent eligibility trace which, through the cAMP-PKA cascade, is rapidly converted into protein synthesis-dependent synaptic potentiation, mediated by a signaling pathway distinct from that of conventional LTP. This synaptic learning rule was incorporated into a computational model, and we found that it adds specificity to reinforcement learning by controlling memory allocation and enabling both 'instructive' and 'supervised' reinforcement learning. We predicted that this mechanism would make reactivated neurons activate more strongly and carry more spatial information than non-reactivated cells, which was confirmed in freely moving mice performing a reward-based navigation task.


Sujet(s)
Dopamine , Neurones , Souris , Animaux , Dopamine/métabolisme , Neurones/physiologie , Hippocampe/physiologie , Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Synapses/physiologie , Potentialisation à long terme/physiologie
4.
Curr Opin Neurobiol ; 75: 102558, 2022 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35660989

RÉSUMÉ

Synaptic plasticity plays a central role in the study of neural mechanisms of learning and memory. Plasticity rules are not invariant over time but are under neuromodulatory control, enabling behavioral states to influence memory formation. Neuromodulation controls synaptic plasticity at network level by directing information flow, at circuit level through changes in excitation/inhibition balance, and at synaptic level through modulation of intracellular signaling cascades. Although most research has focused on modulation of principal neurons, recent progress has uncovered important roles for interneurons in not only routing information, but also setting conditions for synaptic plasticity. Moreover, astrocytes have been shown to both gate and mediate plasticity. These additional mechanisms must be considered for a comprehensive mechanistic understanding of learning and memory.


Sujet(s)
Hippocampe , Apprentissage , Hippocampe/physiologie , Interneurones/physiologie , Apprentissage/physiologie , Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Neurones
5.
Acta Neuropathol Commun ; 10(1): 45, 2022 04 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35379353

RÉSUMÉ

Amyloid-beta (Aß) and tau protein are both involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Aß produces synaptic deficits in wild-type mice that are not seen in Mapt-/- mice, suggesting that tau protein is required for these effects of Aß. However, whether some synapses are more selectively affected and what factors may determine synaptic vulnerability to Aß are poorly understood. Here we first observed that burst timing-dependent long-term potentiation (b-LTP) in hippocampal CA3-CA1 synapses, which requires GluN2B subunit-containing NMDA receptors (NMDARs), was inhibited by human Aß1-42 (hAß) in wild-type (WT) mice, but not in tau-knockout (Mapt-/-) mice. We then tested whether NMDAR currents were affected by hAß; we found that hAß reduced the postsynaptic NMDAR current in WT mice but not in Mapt-/- mice, while the NMDAR current was reduced to a similar extent by the GluN2B-selective NMDAR antagonist Ro 25-6981. To further investigate a possible difference in GluN2B-containing NMDARs in Mapt-/- mice, we used optogenetics to compare NMDAR/AMPAR ratio of EPSCs in CA1 synapses with input from left vs right CA3. It was previously reported in WT mice that hippocampal synapses in CA1 that receive input from the left CA3 display a higher NMDAR charge transfer and a higher Ro-sensitivity than synapses in CA1 that receive input from the right CA3. Here we observed the same pattern in Mapt-/- mice, thus differential NMDAR subunit expression does not explain the difference in hAß effect on LTP. Finally, we asked whether synapses with left vs right CA3 input are differentially affected by hAß in WT mice. We found that NMDAR current in synapses with input from the left CA3 were reduced while synapses with input from the right CA3 were unaffected by acute hAß exposure. These results suggest that hippocampal CA3-CA1 synapses with presynaptic axon originating in the left CA3 are selectively vulnerable to Aß and that a genetic knock out of tau protein protects them from Aß synaptotoxicity.


Sujet(s)
Maladie d'Alzheimer , Hippocampe , Synapses , Maladie d'Alzheimer/métabolisme , Peptides bêta-amyloïdes/métabolisme , Animaux , Région CA1 de l'hippocampe , Région CA3 de l'hippocampe , Hippocampe/métabolisme , Potentialisation à long terme , Souris , Synapses/métabolisme
6.
Curr Biol ; 32(4): 834-841.e5, 2022 02 28.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35016008

RÉSUMÉ

Hippocampal place cells fire at specific locations in the environment. They form a cognitive map that encodes spatial relations in the environment, including reward locations.1 As part of this encoding, dorsal CA1 (dCA1) place cells accumulate at reward.2-5 The encoding of learned reward location could vary between the dorsal and intermediate hippocampus, which differ in gene expression and cortical and subcortical connectivity.6 While the dorsal hippocampus is critical for spatial navigation, the involvement of intermediate CA1 (iCA1) in spatial navigation might depend on task complexity7 and learning phase.8-10 The intermediate-to-ventral hippocampus regulates reward-seeking,11-15 but little is known about the involvement in reward-directed navigation. Here, we compared the encoding of learned reward locations in dCA1 and iCA1 during spatial navigation. We used calcium imaging with a head-mounted microscope to track the activity of CA1 cells over multiple days during which mice learned different reward locations. In dCA1, the fraction of active place cells increased in anticipation of reward, but the pool of active cells changed with the reward location. In iCA1, the same cells anticipated multiple reward locations. Our results support a model in which the dCA1 cognitive map incorporates a changing population of cells that encodes reward proximity through increased population activity, while iCA1 provides a reward-predictive code through a dedicated subpopulation. Both of these location-invariant codes persisted over time, and together they provide a dual hippocampal reward location code, assisting goal-directed navigation.16,17.


Sujet(s)
Cellules de lieu , Navigation spatiale , Animaux , Autoantigènes , Région CA1 de l'hippocampe/physiologie , Hippocampe/physiologie , Souris , Cellules de lieu/physiologie , Récompense , Navigation spatiale/physiologie
7.
Nat Neurosci ; 24(11): 1542-1554, 2021 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34675437

RÉSUMÉ

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis overlapping with frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD) is a fatal and currently untreatable disease characterized by rapid cognitive decline and paralysis. Elucidating initial cellular pathologies is central to therapeutic target development, but obtaining samples from presymptomatic patients is not feasible. Here, we report the development of a cerebral organoid slice model derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) that recapitulates mature cortical architecture and displays early molecular pathology of C9ORF72 ALS/FTD. Using a combination of single-cell RNA sequencing and biological assays, we reveal distinct transcriptional, proteostasis and DNA repair disturbances in astroglia and neurons. We show that astroglia display increased levels of the autophagy signaling protein P62 and that deep layer neurons accumulate dipeptide repeat protein poly(GA), DNA damage and undergo nuclear pyknosis that could be pharmacologically rescued by GSK2606414. Thus, patient-specific iPSC-derived cortical organoid slice cultures are a reproducible translational platform to investigate preclinical ALS/FTD mechanisms as well as novel therapeutic approaches.


Sujet(s)
Sclérose latérale amyotrophique/anatomopathologie , Astrocytes/anatomopathologie , Démence frontotemporale/anatomopathologie , Neurones/anatomopathologie , Organoïdes/anatomopathologie , Sclérose latérale amyotrophique/génétique , Sclérose latérale amyotrophique/métabolisme , Astrocytes/métabolisme , Protéine C9orf72/génétique , Protéine C9orf72/métabolisme , Démence frontotemporale/génétique , Démence frontotemporale/métabolisme , Humains , Cellules souches pluripotentes induites/métabolisme , Cellules souches pluripotentes induites/anatomopathologie , Neurones/métabolisme , Techniques de culture d'organes/méthodes , Organoïdes/métabolisme
8.
Neuron ; 109(17): 2682-2690.e5, 2021 09 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34314698

RÉSUMÉ

Slow-wave sleep is characterized by near-synchronous alternation of active Up states and quiescent Down states in the neocortex. Although the cortex itself can maintain these oscillations, the full expression of Up-Down states requires intact thalamocortical circuits. Sensory thalamic input can drive the cortex into an Up state. Here we show that midline thalamic neurons terminate Up states synchronously across cortical areas. Combining local field potential, single-unit, and patch-clamp recordings in conjunction with optogenetic stimulation and silencing in mice in vivo, we report that thalamic input mediates Down transition via activation of layer 1 neurogliaform inhibitory neurons acting on GABAB receptors. These results strengthen the evidence that thalamocortical interactions are essential for the full expression of slow-wave sleep, show that Down transition is an active process mediated by cortical GABAB receptors, and demonstrate that thalamus synchronizes Down transitions across cortical areas during natural slow-wave sleep.


Sujet(s)
Interneurones/physiologie , Néocortex/physiologie , Récepteurs GABA-B/métabolisme , Sommeil à ondes lentes/physiologie , Thalamus/physiologie , Animaux , Potentiels évoqués , Femelle , Interneurones/métabolisme , Mâle , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Néocortex/cytologie , Néocortex/métabolisme , Thalamus/cytologie , Thalamus/métabolisme
9.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(6): e1009017, 2021 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34111110

RÉSUMÉ

To survive, animals have to quickly modify their behaviour when the reward changes. The internal representations responsible for this are updated through synaptic weight changes, mediated by certain neuromodulators conveying feedback from the environment. In previous experiments, we discovered a form of hippocampal Spike-Timing-Dependent-Plasticity (STDP) that is sequentially modulated by acetylcholine and dopamine. Acetylcholine facilitates synaptic depression, while dopamine retroactively converts the depression into potentiation. When these experimental findings were implemented as a learning rule in a computational model, our simulations showed that cholinergic-facilitated depression is important for reversal learning. In the present study, we tested the model's prediction by optogenetically inactivating cholinergic neurons in mice during a hippocampus-dependent spatial learning task with changing rewards. We found that reversal learning, but not initial place learning, was impaired, verifying our computational prediction that acetylcholine-modulated plasticity promotes the unlearning of old reward locations. Further, differences in neuromodulator concentrations in the model captured mouse-by-mouse performance variability in the optogenetic experiments. Our line of work sheds light on how neuromodulators enable the learning of new contingencies.


Sujet(s)
Comportement animal , Apprentissage/physiologie , Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Transmission synaptique/physiologie , Animaux , Neurones cholinergiques/physiologie , Potentialisation à long terme/physiologie , Souris , Modèles neurologiques , Agents neuromédiateurs/physiologie , Récompense
10.
Elife ; 102021 04 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33821790

RÉSUMÉ

The hippocampus plays a central role in long-term memory formation, and different hippocampal network states are thought to have different functions in this process. These network states are controlled by neuromodulatory inputs, including the cholinergic input from the medial septum. Here, we used optogenetic stimulation of septal cholinergic neurons to understand how cholinergic activity affects different stages of spatial memory formation in a reward-based navigation task in mice. We found that optogenetic stimulation of septal cholinergic neurons (1) impaired memory formation when activated at goal location but not during navigation, (2) reduced sharp wave ripple (SWR) incidence at goal location, and (3) reduced SWR incidence and enhanced theta-gamma oscillations during sleep. These results underscore the importance of appropriate timing of cholinergic input in long-term memory formation, which might help explain the limited success of cholinesterase inhibitor drugs in treating memory impairment in Alzheimer's disease.


Sujet(s)
Neurones cholinergiques/physiologie , Sommeil , Apprentissage spatial/physiologie , Mémoire spatiale/physiologie , Navigation spatiale , Animaux , Objectifs , Mâle , Souris , Optogénétique
11.
Nat Neurosci ; 24(5): 694-704, 2021 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33782620

RÉSUMÉ

Neural correlates of external variables provide potential internal codes that guide an animal's behavior. Notably, first-order features of neural activity, such as single-neuron firing rates, have been implicated in encoding information. However, the extent to which higher-order features, such as multineuron coactivity, play primary roles in encoding information or secondary roles in supporting single-neuron codes remains unclear. Here, we show that millisecond-timescale coactivity among hippocampal CA1 neurons discriminates distinct, short-lived behavioral contingencies. This contingency discrimination was unrelated to the tuning of individual neurons, but was instead an emergent property of their coactivity. Contingency-discriminating patterns were reactivated offline after learning, and their reinstatement predicted trial-by-trial memory performance. Moreover, optogenetic suppression of inputs from the upstream CA3 region during learning impaired coactivity-based contingency information in the CA1 and subsequent dynamic memory retrieval. These findings identify millisecond-timescale coactivity as a primary feature of neural firing that encodes behaviorally relevant variables and supports memory retrieval.


Sujet(s)
Région CA1 de l'hippocampe/physiologie , Mémoire/physiologie , Neurones/physiologie , Animaux , Apprentissage/physiologie , Rappel mnésique/physiologie , Souris , Modèles neurologiques , Optogénétique
12.
Eur J Neurosci ; 53(5): 1378-1393, 2021 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33131134

RÉSUMÉ

Cholinergic tone is high during wake and rapid eye movement sleep and lower during slow wave sleep (SWS). Nevertheless, the low tone of acetylcholine during SWS modulates sharp wave ripple incidence in the hippocampus and slow wave activity in the neocortex. Linking the hippocampus and neocortex, the medial entorhinal cortex (mEC) regulates the coupling between these structures during SWS, alternating between silent Down states and active Up states, which outlast neocortical ones. Here, we investigated how low physiological concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh; 100-500 nM) modulate Up and Down states in a mEC slice preparation. We find that ACh has a dual effect on mEC activity: it prolongs apparent Up state duration as recorded in individual cells and decreases the total synaptic charge transfer, without affecting the duration of detectable synaptic activity. The overall outcome of ACh application is excitatory and we show that ACh increases Up state incidence via muscarinic receptor activation. The mean firing rate of principal neurons increased in around half of the cells while the other half showed a decrease in firing rate. Using two-photon calcium imaging of population activity, we found that population-wide network events are more frequent and rhythmic during ACh and confirmed that ACh modulates cell participation in these network events, consistent with a role for cholinergic modulation in regulating information flow between the hippocampus and neocortex during SWS.


Sujet(s)
Cortex entorhinal , Néocortex , Potentiels d'action , Animaux , Agents cholinergiques , Hippocampe , Souris
13.
Neuron ; 103(4): 563-581, 2019 08 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31437453

RÉSUMÉ

Spike-timing-dependent synaptic plasticity (STDP) is a leading cellular model for behavioral learning and memory with rich computational properties. However, the relationship between the millisecond-precision spike timing required for STDP and the much slower timescales of behavioral learning is not well understood. Neuromodulation offers an attractive mechanism to connect these different timescales, and there is now strong experimental evidence that STDP is under neuromodulatory control by acetylcholine, monoamines, and other signaling molecules. Here, we review neuromodulation of STDP, the underlying mechanisms, functional implications, and possible involvement in brain disorders.


Sujet(s)
Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Agents neuromédiateurs/physiologie , Potentiels d'action , Animaux , Astrocytes/physiologie , Comportement/physiologie , Encéphalopathies/traitement médicamenteux , Encéphalopathies/physiopathologie , Cartographie cérébrale , Humains , Apprentissage/physiologie , Consolidation de la mémoire/physiologie , Modèles neurologiques , Thérapie moléculaire ciblée , Maladies neurodégénératives/traitement médicamenteux , Maladies neurodégénératives/physiopathologie , Troubles du développement neurologique/traitement médicamenteux , Troubles du développement neurologique/physiopathologie , Neurones/physiologie , Trouble obsessionnel compulsif/traitement médicamenteux , Trouble obsessionnel compulsif/physiopathologie , Terminaisons présynaptiques/physiologie , Récepteurs aux neuromédiateurs/physiologie , , Transduction du signal/physiologie , Spécificité d'espèce , Accident vasculaire cérébral/traitement médicamenteux , Accident vasculaire cérébral/physiopathologie , Troubles liés à une substance/traitement médicamenteux , Troubles liés à une substance/physiopathologie , Facteurs temps
14.
Nat Neurosci ; 22(4): 669-679, 2019 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30886407

RÉSUMÉ

Neural organoids have the potential to improve our understanding of human brain development and neurological disorders. However, it remains to be seen whether these tissues can model circuit formation with functional neuronal output. Here we have adapted air-liquid interface culture to cerebral organoids, leading to improved neuronal survival and axon outgrowth. The resulting thick axon tracts display various morphologies, including long-range projection within and away from the organoid, growth-cone turning, and decussation. Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals various cortical neuronal identities, and retrograde tracing demonstrates tract morphologies that match proper molecular identities. These cultures exhibit active neuronal networks, and subcortical projecting tracts can innervate mouse spinal cord explants and evoke contractions of adjacent muscle in a manner dependent on intact organoid-derived innervating tracts. Overall, these results reveal a remarkable self-organization of corticofugal and callosal tracts with a functional output, providing new opportunities to examine relevant aspects of human CNS development and disease.


Sujet(s)
Cortex cérébral/croissance et développement , Neurones/physiologie , Organoïdes/croissance et développement , Techniques de culture de tissus/méthodes , Axones/physiologie , Survie cellulaire , Cortex cérébral/cytologie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Voies nerveuses/cytologie , Voies nerveuses/physiologie , Neurones/cytologie , Organoïdes/cytologie , Cellules souches pluripotentes/physiologie
15.
Neuropharmacology ; 148: 394-405, 2019 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30472273

RÉSUMÉ

In addition to reducing seizures, anti-epileptic treatments should preserve physiological network activity. Here, we used a thalamocortical slice preparation displaying physiological slow oscillations to investigate the effects of anticonvulsant drugs on physiological activity and epileptiform activity in two pharmacological epilepsy models. Thus, we compared the effects of GABA pharmacology on spontaneous physiological and pathological events in slices of the mouse barrel cortex. We show that both reducing inhibition using GABAAR blockers and enhancing excitation by lowering Mg2+ concentration allow for the transition from physiological slow oscillations to epileptiform activity. Our results indicate that GABABR antagonists have pro-convulsive properties by increasing event duration in the low inhibition model and event frequency in the high excitation model. Moreover, we show that GABABR agonists and GABA uptake blockers, known for their anticonvulsant properties, act primarily on epileptiform burst frequency and allow for a partial restoration of physiological events. As a proof of principle, these results indicate that a slice model with spontaneous network events may be a useful pipeline to investigate the effects of anti-epileptic drugs on both epileptiform and physiological network activity.


Sujet(s)
Épilepsie/physiopathologie , Modulateurs GABA/pharmacologie , Potentiels de membrane/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cortex somatosensoriel/physiopathologie , Animaux , Anticonvulsivants/pharmacologie , Magnésium/pharmacologie , Souris , Pyridazines/pharmacologie , Cortex somatosensoriel/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques
16.
Curr Biol ; 28(16): 2557-2569.e4, 2018 08 20.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30100338

RÉSUMÉ

The central cholinergic system and the amygdala are important for motivation and mnemonic processes. Different cholinergic populations innervate the amygdala, but it is unclear how these projections impact amygdala processes. Using optogenetic circuit-mapping strategies in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-cre mice, we demonstrate that amygdala-projecting basal forebrain and brainstem ChAT-containing neurons can differentially affect amygdala circuits and behavior. Photo-activating ChAT terminals in vitro revealed the underlying synaptic impact of brainstem inputs to the central lateral division to be excitatory, mediated via the synergistic glutamatergic activation of AMPA and NMDA receptors. In contrast, stimulating basal forebrain inputs to the basal nucleus resulted in endogenous acetylcholine (ACh) release, resulting in biphasic inhibition-excitation responses onto principal neurons. Such response profiles are physiological hallmarks of neural oscillations and could thus form the basis of ACh-mediated rhythmicity in amygdala networks. Consistent with this, in vivo basal forebrain ChAT+ activation strengthened amygdala basal nucleus theta and gamma frequency rhythmicity, both of which continued for seconds after stimulation and were dependent on local muscarinic and nicotinic receptor activation, respectively. Activation of brainstem ChAT-containing neurons, however, resulted in a transient increase in central lateral amygdala activity that was independent of cholinergic receptors. In addition, driving these respective inputs in behaving animals induced opposing appetitive and defensive learning-related behavioral changes. Because learning and memory are supported by both cellular and network-level processes in central cholinergic and amygdala networks, these results provide a route by which distinct cholinergic inputs can convey salient information to the amygdala and promote associative biophysical changes that underlie emotional memories.


Sujet(s)
Amygdale (système limbique)/physiologie , Prosencéphale basal/physiologie , Tronc cérébral/physiologie , Neurones cholinergiques/physiologie , Apprentissage/physiologie , Mémoire/physiologie , Animaux , Choline O-acetyltransferase/métabolisme , Mâle , Souris , Souris transgéniques , Optogénétique
17.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 9486, 2018 06 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29930322

RÉSUMÉ

Neuromodulation plays a fundamental role in the acquisition of new behaviours. In previous experimental work, we showed that acetylcholine biases hippocampal synaptic plasticity towards depression, and the subsequent application of dopamine can retroactively convert depression into potentiation. We also demonstrated that incorporating this sequentially neuromodulated Spike-Timing-Dependent Plasticity (STDP) rule in a network model of navigation yields effective learning of changing reward locations. Here, we employ computational modelling to further characterize the effects of cholinergic depression on behaviour. We find that acetylcholine, by allowing learning from negative outcomes, enhances exploration over the action space. We show that this results in a variety of effects, depending on the structure of the model, the environment and the task. Interestingly, sequentially neuromodulated STDP also yields flexible learning, surpassing the performance of other reward-modulated plasticity rules.


Sujet(s)
Acétylcholine/métabolisme , Neurones cholinergiques/physiologie , Modèles neurologiques , Plasticité neuronale , Récompense , Navigation spatiale , Animaux , Neurones cholinergiques/métabolisme , Comportement d'exploration
18.
eNeuro ; 5(2)2018.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29740596

RÉSUMÉ

Hypofunction of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) in inhibitory GABAergic interneurons is implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia (SZ), a heritable disorder with many susceptibility genes. However, it is still unclear how SZ risk genes interfere with NMDAR-mediated synaptic transmission in diverse inhibitory interneuron populations. One putative risk gene is neuregulin 1 (NRG1), which signals via the receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB4, itself a schizophrenia risk gene. The type I isoform of NRG1 shows increased expression in the brain of SZ patients, and ErbB4 is enriched in GABAergic interneurons expressing parvalbumin (PV) or cholecystokinin (CCK). Here, we investigated ErbB4 expression and synaptic transmission in interneuronal populations of the hippocampus of transgenic mice overexpressing NRG1 type I (NRG1tg-type-I mice). Immunohistochemical analyses confirmed that ErbB4 was coexpressed with either PV or CCK in hippocampal interneurons, but we observed a reduced number of ErbB4-immunopositive interneurons in the NRG1tg-type-I mice. NMDAR-mediated currents in interneurons expressing PV (including PV+ basket cells) or CCK were reduced in NRG1tg-type-I mice compared to their littermate controls. We found no difference in AMPA receptor-mediated currents. Optogenetic activation (5 pulses at 20 Hz) of local glutamatergic fibers revealed a decreased NMDAR-mediated contribution to disynaptic GABAergic inhibition of pyramidal cells in the NRG1tg-type-I mice. GABAergic synaptic transmission from either PV+ or CCK+ interneurons, and glutamatergic transmission onto pyramidal cells, did not significantly differ between genotypes. The results indicate that synaptic NMDAR-mediated signaling in hippocampal interneurons is sensitive to chronically elevated NGR1 type I levels. This may contribute to the pathophysiological consequences of increased NRG1 expression in SZ.


Sujet(s)
Hippocampe/métabolisme , Interneurones/métabolisme , Neuréguline-1/métabolisme , Parvalbumines/métabolisme , Récepteur ErbB-4/métabolisme , Récepteurs du N-méthyl-D-aspartate/métabolisme , Transduction du signal , Animaux , Souris transgéniques , Schizophrénie/métabolisme
19.
Neuron ; 97(6): 1244-1252.e5, 2018 03 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29503184

RÉSUMÉ

Activity-dependent synaptic plasticity is critical for cortical circuit refinement. The synaptic homeostasis hypothesis suggests that synaptic connections are strengthened during wake and downscaled during sleep; however, it is not obvious how the same plasticity rules could explain both outcomes. Using whole-cell recordings and optogenetic stimulation of presynaptic input in urethane-anesthetized mice, which exhibit slow-wave-sleep (SWS)-like activity, we show that synaptic plasticity rules are gated by cortical dynamics in vivo. While Down states support conventional spike timing-dependent plasticity, Up states are biased toward depression such that presynaptic stimulation alone leads to synaptic depression, while connections contributing to postsynaptic spiking are protected against this synaptic weakening. We find that this novel activity-dependent and input-specific downscaling mechanism has two important computational advantages: (1) improved signal-to-noise ratio, and (2) preservation of previously stored information. Thus, these synaptic plasticity rules provide an attractive mechanism for SWS-related synaptic downscaling and circuit refinement.


Sujet(s)
Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Sommeil à ondes lentes/physiologie , Synapses/physiologie , Animaux , Potentiels post-synaptiques excitateurs/physiologie , Femelle , Mâle , Souris , Souris de souche-129 , Souris transgéniques , Synapses/composition chimique
20.
Curr Opin Neurobiol ; 51: 1-7, 2018 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29454833

RÉSUMÉ

In the classical view, postsynaptic NMDA receptors (NMDARs) trigger Hebbian plasticity via Ca2+ influx. However, unconventional presynaptic NMDARs (preNMDARs) which regulate both long-term and short-term plasticity at several synapse types have also been found. A lack of sufficiently specific experimental manipulations and a poor understanding of how preNMDARs signal have contributed to long-standing controversy surrounding these receptors. Although several prior studies linked preNMDARs to neocortical timing-dependent long-term depression (tLTD), a recent study argues that the NMDARs are actually postsynaptic and signal metabotropically, that is, without Ca2+. Other recent work indicates that, whereas ionotropic preNMDARs signaling controls evoked release, spontaneous release is regulated by metabotropic NMDAR signaling. We argue that elucidating unconventional NMDAR signaling modes-both presynaptically and metabotropically-is key to resolving the preNMDAR debate.


Sujet(s)
Plasticité neuronale/physiologie , Récepteurs du N-méthyl-D-aspartate/métabolisme , Récepteurs présynaptiques/métabolisme , Synapses/physiologie , Animaux , Récepteurs présynaptiques/physiologie
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