Diverging from the Norm: Reevaluating What Miniature Excitatory Postsynaptic Currents Tell Us about Homeostatic Synaptic Plasticity.
activity dependent
divergent scaling
homeostatic
homeostatic plasticity
homeostatic synaptic plasticity
mEPSCs
mEPSPs
synaptic
synaptic homeostasis
synaptic scaling
Journal
The Neuroscientist : a review journal bringing neurobiology, neurology and psychiatry
ISSN: 1089-4098
Titre abrégé: Neuroscientist
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9504819
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
29 Jul 2022
29 Jul 2022
Historique:
entrez:
29
7
2022
pubmed:
30
7
2022
medline:
30
7
2022
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
The idea that the nervous system maintains a set point of network activity and homeostatically returns to that set point in the face of dramatic disruption-during development, after injury, in pathologic states, and during sleep/wake cycles-is rapidly becoming accepted as a key plasticity behavior, placing it alongside long-term potentiation and depression. The dramatic growth in studies of homeostatic synaptic plasticity of miniature excitatory synaptic currents (mEPSCs) is attributable, in part, to the simple yet elegant mechanism of uniform multiplicative scaling proposed by Turrigiano and colleagues: that neurons sense their own activity and globally multiply the strength of every synapse by a single factor to return activity to the set point without altering established differences in synaptic weights. We have recently shown that for mEPSCs recorded from control and activity-blocked cultures of mouse cortical neurons, the synaptic scaling factor is not uniform but is close to 1 for the smallest mEPSC amplitudes and progressively increases as mEPSC amplitudes increase, which we term
Identifiants
pubmed: 35904350
doi: 10.1177/10738584221112336
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM