Activity-dependent induction of facilitation, depression, and post-tetanic potentiation at an insect central synapse

1991 ◽  
Vol 168 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
BarryA. Trimmer ◽  
JanisC. Weeks
2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 2845-2855 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lyle E. Fox ◽  
Philip E. Lloyd

Many neuromuscular and central synapses exhibit activity-dependent plasticity. The sustained high-frequency firing needed to elicit some forms of plasticity are similar to those often required to release neuropeptides. We wanted to determine if neuropeptide release could contribute to post-tetanic potentiation (PTP) and chose neuromuscular synapses in buccal muscle I3a to explore this issue. This muscle is innervated by two motor neurons (termed B3 and B38) that show PTP in response to tetanic stimulation. B3 and B38 use glutamate as their fast transmitter but express different modulatory neuropeptides. B3 expresses FMRFamide, a neuropeptide that only slightly increases its own excitatory junction potentials (EJPs). B38 expresses the small cardioactive peptide (SCP), a neuropeptide that dramatically increases its own EJPs. It was our hypothesis that SCP released from B38's terminals during tetanic stimulation mediated a component of PTP for B38. Because no antagonist to SCP currently exists, we used several indirect approaches to test this hypothesis. First, we studied the effects of increasing stimulation frequency during the tetanus or lowering temperature on PTP. Both of these changes are known to dramatically increase SCP release. We found that increasing the frequency of stimulation increased PTP for both neurons; however, the effects were larger for B38. Decreasing the temperature tended to reduce PTP for B3, while increasing PTP for B38. These results were consistent with known properties of SCP release from B38. Next we selectively superfused the neuromuscular synapses with exogenous SCP to determine if this would occlude the effects of SCP released from B38 during a tetanus. We found that exogenous SCP dramatically reduced PTP for B38 but had little effect on PTP for B3. Thus our results support the hypothesis that physiological stimulation of B38 elicits PTP that is predominantly dependent on the release of SCP from its own terminals. They also demonstrate that the mechanisms underlying PTP can be very different for two motor neurons innervating the same target muscle.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (47) ◽  
pp. 23783-23789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Delvendahl ◽  
Katarzyna Kita ◽  
Martin Müller

Animal behavior is remarkably robust despite constant changes in neural activity. Homeostatic plasticity stabilizes central nervous system (CNS) function on time scales of hours to days. If and how CNS function is stabilized on more rapid time scales remains unknown. Here, we discovered that mossy fiber synapses in the mouse cerebellum homeostatically control synaptic efficacy within minutes after pharmacological glutamate receptor impairment. This rapid form of homeostatic plasticity is expressed presynaptically. We show that modulations of readily releasable vesicle pool size and release probability normalize synaptic strength in a hierarchical fashion upon acute pharmacological and prolonged genetic receptor perturbation. Presynaptic membrane capacitance measurements directly demonstrate regulation of vesicle pool size upon receptor impairment. Moreover, presynaptic voltage-clamp analysis revealed increased Ca2+-current density under specific experimental conditions. Thus, homeostatic modulation of presynaptic exocytosis through specific mechanisms stabilizes synaptic transmission in a CNS circuit on time scales ranging from minutes to months. Rapid presynaptic homeostatic plasticity may ensure stable neural circuit function in light of rapid activity-dependent plasticity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee Stephen Lesperance ◽  
Yi-Mei Yang ◽  
Lu-Yang Wang

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Delvendahl ◽  
Katarzyna Kita ◽  
Martin Müller

AbstractAnimal behavior is remarkably robust despite constant changes in neural activity. Homeostatic plasticity stabilizes central nervous system (CNS) function on time scales of hours to days. If and how CNS function is stabilized on more rapid time scales remains unknown. Here we discovered that mossy fiber synapses in the mouse cerebellum homeostatically control synaptic efficacy within minutes after pharmacological glutamate receptor impairment. This rapid form of homeostatic plasticity is expressed presynaptically. We show that modulations of readily-releasable vesicle pool size and release probability normalize synaptic strength in a hierarchical fashion upon acute pharmacological and prolonged genetic receptor perturbation. Presynaptic membrane capacitance measurements directly demonstrate regulation of vesicle pool size upon receptor impairment. Moreover, presynaptic voltage-clamp analysis revealed increased calcium-current density under specific experimental conditions. Thus, homeostatic modulation of presynaptic exocytosis through specific mechanisms stabilizes synaptic transmission in a CNS circuit on time scales ranging from minutes to months. Rapid presynaptic homeostatic plasticity may ensure stable neural circuit function in light of rapid activity-dependent plasticity.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document