Intrinsic Excitability Increase in Cerebellar Purkinje Cells after Delay Eye-Blink Conditioning in Mice

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Intrinsic Excitability Increase in Cerebellar Purkinje Cells after Delay Eye-Blink Conditioning in Mice
المؤلفون: Craig Weiss, Michael H. McCarthy, Gabrielle V. Watkins, Carmen Lin, Heather K. Titley, John F. Disterhoft, Christian Hansel
المصدر: J Neurosci
سنة النشر: 2019
مصطلحات موضوعية: 0301 basic medicine, Male, Cerebellum, Small-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels, Conditioning, Classical, Parallel fiber, Biology, SK channel, 03 medical and health sciences, Mice, Purkinje Cells, 0302 clinical medicine, medicine, Animals, Learning, Research Articles, Neuronal Plasticity, Blinking, General Neuroscience, Afterhyperpolarization, Climbing fiber, Associative learning, Mice, Inbred C57BL, 030104 developmental biology, medicine.anatomical_structure, Synaptic plasticity, Motor learning, Neuroscience, 030217 neurology & neurosurgery
الوصف: Cerebellar-based learning is thought to rely on synaptic plasticity, particularly at synaptic inputs to Purkinje cells. Recently, however, other complementary mechanisms have been identified. Intrinsic plasticity is one such mechanism, and depends in part on the downregulation of calcium-dependent SK-type K+channels, which contribute to a medium-slow afterhyperpolarization (AHP) after spike bursts, regulating membrane excitability. In the hippocampus, intrinsic plasticity plays a role in trace eye-blink conditioning; however, corresponding excitability changes in the cerebellum in associative learning, such as in trace or delay eye-blink conditioning, are less well studied. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were obtained from Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices prepared from male mice ∼48 h after they learned a delay eye-blink conditioning task. Over a period of repeated training sessions, mice received either paired trials of a tone coterminating with a periorbital shock (conditioning) or trials in which these stimuli were randomly presented in an unpaired manner (pseudoconditioning). Purkinje cells from conditioned mice show a significantly reduced AHP after trains of parallel fiber stimuli and after climbing fiber evoked complex spikes. The number of spikelets in the complex spike waveform is increased after conditioning. Moreover, we find that SK-dependent intrinsic plasticity is occluded in conditioned, but not pseudoconditioned mice. These findings show that excitability is enhanced in Purkinje cells after delay eye-blink conditioning, and point toward a downregulation of SK channels as a potential underlying mechanism. The observation that this learning effect lasts at least up to 2 d after training shows that intrinsic plasticity regulates excitability in the long term.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTPlasticity of membrane excitability (“intrinsic plasticity”) has been observed in invertebrate and vertebrate neurons, coinduced with synaptic plasticity or in isolation. Although the cellular phenomenon per se is well established, it remains unclear what role intrinsic plasticity plays in learning and if it even persists long enough to serve functions in engram physiology beyond aiding synaptic plasticity. Here, we demonstrate that cerebellar Purkinje cells upregulate excitability in delay eye-blink conditioning, a form of motor learning. This plasticity is observed 48 h after training and alters synaptically evoked spike firing and integrative properties of these neurons. These findings show that intrinsic plasticity enhances the spike firing output of Purkinje cells and persists over the course of days.
تدمد: 1529-2401
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::3e74026ef49de677eaa5704e44daa91c
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32015022
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....3e74026ef49de677eaa5704e44daa91c
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE