Title: LONGTERM POTENTIATION LTP
1LONG-TERM POTENTIATION (LTP) Introduction LTP as
a candidate mechanism for the activity-dependent
change in the strength of synaptic connections
LTP is a persistent increase in synaptic
strength (as measured by the amplitude of the
EPSP) that can be rapidly induced by brief neural
activity.
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4- Anatomical background for Hippocampus
- two interlocking C-shaped regions (the
hippocampus and the dentate gurus), - main inputs entorhinal cortex
- three major afferent pathways (subiculum -gt CA1)
- Perforant pathway (subiculum -gt granule cells
in dentate gyrus) - Mossy fiber pathway (axons of the granule
cells -gt pyramidal cells in the CA3) - Schaffer collaterals (pyramidal cells in the
CA3 -gt pyramidal cells in the CA1)
5- Perforant pathway (subiculum -gt granule
cells in dentate gyrus) - Mossy fiber pathway
- (axons of the granule cells -gt pyramidal
cells in the CA3) - Schaffer collaterals
- (pyramidal cells in the CA3 -gt pyramidal
cells in the CA1)
6- The initial finding by Timothy Bliss and Terje
Lomo (1973) - Anaesthetized rabbit
- Brief, high-frequency stimulation of the
perforant pathway input to the dentate gyrus
produced a long lasting enhancement of the
extracellular recorded field potential.
7Recording techniques In vivo (in awake and
freely moving animals, or in anesthetized
animals) in vitro (slice preparations)
Extracellar recordings intracellular recordings
Experimental design Stimulation of a bundle of
presynaptic axons recording of monosynaptic EPSP
Typical results for induction of LTP
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12- The "classical properties" of LTP
- Cooperativity
- The probability of inducing LTP, or the magnitude
of the resulting change, increases with the
number of stimulated afferents. - Associativity
- associativity was shown in preparations in
which two distinct axonal inputs converged onto
the same postsynaptic target - Concurrent stimulation of weak and strong
synapses to a given neuron strengthens the weak
ones. - Input specificity
- LTP is restricted to only the inputs that
received the tenanic (high-frequency) stimulation
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15- Underlying molecular mechanisms
- Introduction
- LTP requires some sort of additive effect
- High-frequency stimulation
- Activation of synapses and depolarization of the
postsynaptic neuron must occur at the same time - LTP (in area CA1) depends on certain changes at
glutamate synapses, - Types of glutamate receptors
- NMDA receptors
- Non-NMDA receptors
- At non-NMDA receptors,
- glutamate is excitatory
- Open channels for sodium ions
16- At NMDA receptors,
- Controls a calcium ion channel
- glutamate is neither excitatory nor inhibitory
- Ion channel is blocked by magnesium ions
- Activation of NMDA receptors requires both
glutamate and depolarization, which lead to the
removal of magnesium ions - The NMDA receptors now respond actively to
glutamate and admit large amount of Ca2 through
their channels - After induction of LTP, transmission at non-NMDA
receptors is facilitated
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19- LTP is induced via a cascade of neurochemical
steps - The entry of Ca2 ions into neurons activates
some protein kinases (which are enzymes that
catalyze phosphorylation, the addition of
phosphate groups to protein molecules). - One of the kinase, Calcium-calmodulin kinase (CaM
kinase) remains activated once it is put into
that state by Ca2, even if the level of Ca2
subsequently falls - The activated protein kinases also trigger the
synthesis of proteins - activate cAMP responsive element-binding protein
(CREB) - CREB -gt production of the transcription (mRNA) of
immediate early genes (IEGs) -gt regulate the
expression of particular late effector genes
(LEGs) -gt synthesis of proteins - Induction of LTP requires a retrograde signal,
from the postsynaptic neuron to the presynaptic
neuron
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