• J. Neurophysiol. · Mar 1997

    Transient synaptic potentiation in the visual cortex. II. Developmental regulation.

    • K Harsanyi and M J Friedlander.
    • Department of Neurobiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294, USA.
    • J. Neurophysiol. 1997 Mar 1; 77 (3): 1284-93.

    AbstractIn our previous study, pairing-induced transient synaptic potentiation in supragranular layers of the visual cortex was described in mature guinea pigs. In the present study, the development of this type of synaptic plasticity and the underlying cellular mechanisms that mediate it were evaluated in animals from postnatal day (PND) 5 to 180. Potentiation is more reliably evoked in younger animals (likelihood: 75%, PND 5-30; 51%, PND > or = 34), and the magnitude of the effect is greater (+40 +/- 3%, mean +/- SE, PND 5-30; +26 +/- 3%, PND > or = 34). Similar to data obtained from the mature animals, visual cortical transient synaptic potentiation in the immature cortex occurs at excitatory synaptic sites directly activated by the stimulation, and activation by local recurrent cortical circuits is not necessary for the induction of this potentiation. This is demonstrated by 1) experiments in which action potential output from the paired neuron was blocked by Lidocaine, N-ethyl bromide quaternary salt applied into the neuron (5 of 5), and 2) experiments in which the contribution to the compound postsynaptic potential by inhibitory synapses was eliminated by selective, intracellular blockade by gamma-aminobutyric acid-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials only onto the recorded neuron (7 of 11). Thus these perturbations do not reduce the likelihood or magnitude of this synaptic potentiation. In contrast to the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor dependence for induction of this synaptic potentiation in the cortex of mature animals, in the young animals' cortices (PND 11-27) potentiation is readily induced during blockade of NMDA receptors (72%, 13 of 18, did not different from control: 75%, 40 of 53). Thus the NMDA receptor becomes functionally linked to a synaptic potentiation cascade during development, replacing another 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV)-insensitive potentiation process in the neonatal cortex. Postsynaptic intracellular calcium has a critical role in the induction of this form of synaptic potentiation in all ages studied. Synaptic potentiation was prevented (8 of 11 cases) or was replaced by synaptic depression (3 of 11 cells) in experiments in which postsynaptic calcium levels were reduced by intracellular application of 1,2-bis-2-aminophenoxy ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA) in the cortex of young (PND 7-14) animals, or in which the extracellular calcium concentrations was lowered. Inhibition of postsynaptic calcium-induced calcium release blocked synaptic potentiation (4 of 4 cells). Prolonged superfusion (3 h) of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-nitro-arginine (LNA) did not significantly affect the likelihood (in LNA, 81%; 13 of 16 cells), or the magnitude (+38 +/- 7% increase in LNA vs. +40 +/- 3% in control cases) of potentiation, in contrast to its effects in the mature cortex.

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