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1.
Long-term potentiation of synaptic transmission is considered to be an elementary process underlying the cellular mechanism of memory formation. In the present study we aimed to examine whether or not the dendrodendritic mitral-to-granule cell synapses in the carp olfactory bulb show plastic changes after their repeated activation. It was found that: (1) the dendrodendritic mitral-to-granule cell synapses showed three types of plasticity after tetanic electrical stimulation applied to the olfactory tract—long-term potentiation (potentiation lasting >1 h), short-term potentiation (potentiation lasting <1 h) and post-tetanic potentiation (potentiation lasting <10 min); (2) Long-term potentiation was generally induced when both the dendrodendritic mitral-to-granule cell synapses and centrifugal fiber-to-granule cell synapses were repeatedly and simultaneously activated; (3) long-term enhancement (>1 h) of the odor-evoked bulbar response accompanied the electrically-induced LTP, and; (4) repeated olfactory stimulation enhanced dendrodendritic mitral-to-granule cell transmission. Based on these results, it was proposed that long-term potentiation (as well as olfactory memory) occurs at the dendrodendritic mitral-to-granule cell synapses after strong and long-lasting depolarization of granule cells, which follows repeated and simultaneous synaptic activation of both the peripheral and deep dendrites (or somata).  相似文献   

2.
Shen Y  Linden DJ 《Neuron》2005,46(5):715-722
Persistent, use-dependent modulation of synaptic strength has been demonstrated for fast synaptic transmission mediated by glutamate and has been hypothesized to underlie persistent behavioral changes ranging from memory to addiction. Glutamate released at synapses is sequestered by the action of excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) in glia and postsynaptic neurons. So, the efficacy of glutamate transporter function is crucial for regulating glutamate spillover to adjacent presynaptic and postsynaptic receptors and the consequent induction of plastic or excitotoxic processes. Here, we report that tetanic stimulation of cerebellar climbing fiber-Purkinje cell synapses results in long-term potentiation (LTP) of a climbing fiber-evoked glutamate transporter current recorded in Purkinje cells. This LTP is postsynaptically expressed and requires activation of an mGluR1/PKC cascade. Together with a simultaneously induced long-term depression (LTD) of postsynaptic AMPA receptors, this might reflect an integrated antiexcitotoxic cellular response to strong climbing fiber synaptic activation, as occurs following an ischemic episode.  相似文献   

3.
Maren S 《Neuron》2005,47(6):783-786
Do associative learning and synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) depend on the same cellular mechanisms? Recent work in the amygdala reveals that LTP and Pavlovian fear conditioning induce similar changes in postsynaptic AMPA-type glutamate receptors and that occluding these changes by viral-mediated overexpression of a dominant-negative GluR1 construct attenuates both LTP and fear memory in rats. Novel forms of presynaptic plasticity in the lateral nucleus may also contribute to fear memory formation, bolstering the connection between synaptic plasticity mechanisms and associative learning and memory.  相似文献   

4.
The presence of zinc in glutamatergic synaptic vesicles of excitatory neurons of mammalian cerebral cortex suggests that zinc might regulate plasticity of synapses formed by these neurons. Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a form of synaptic plasticity that may underlie learning and memory. We tested the hypothesis that zinc within vesicles of mossy fibers (mf) contributes to mf-LTP, a classical form of presynaptic LTP. We synthesized an extracellular zinc chelator with selectivity and kinetic properties suitable for study of the large transient of zinc in the synaptic cleft induced by mf stimulation. We found that vesicular zinc is required for presynaptic mf-LTP. Unexpectedly, vesicular zinc also inhibits?a form of postsynaptic mf-LTP. Because the mf-CA3 synapse provides a major source of excitatory input to the hippocampus, regulating its efficacy by these dual actions, vesicular zinc is critical to proper function of hippocampal circuitry in health and disease.  相似文献   

5.
The activation of silent synapses is a proposed mechanism to account for rapid increases in synaptic efficacy such as long-term potentiation (LTP). Using simultaneous recordings from individual pre- and postsynaptic neurons in organotypic hippocampal slices, we show that two CA3 neurons can be connected entirely by silent synapses. Increasing release probability or application of cyclothiazide does not produce responses from these silent synapses. Direct measurement of NMDAR-mediated postsynaptic responses in all-silent synaptic connections before and after LTP induction show no change in failure rate, amplitude, or area. These data do not support hypotheses that synapse silent results from presynaptic factors or that LTP results from increases in presynaptic glutamate release. LTP is also associated with an increase in postsynaptic responsiveness to exogenous AMPA. We conclude that synapse silence, activation, and expression of LTP are postsynaptic.  相似文献   

6.
Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a cellular model for learning and memory and believed to be critical for plastic changes in the brain. Depending on the central nervous system region, LTP has been proposed to contribute to many key physiological functions and pathological conditions, such as learning/memory, chronic pain, and drug addiction. While the induction of LTP in general requires activation of postsynaptic glutamate receptors, the expression of LTP can be mediated by postsynaptic mechanisms and/or presynaptic enhancement of glutamate release. In this review, we will evaluate recent progress made in the mechanisms of LTP in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and explore its functional significance in synaptic changes after peripheral injury. Recent findings suggest that while ACC LTP in brain slice preparations is postsynaptically induced and expressed, injury triggered synaptic potentiation in the ACC contains both presynaptic enhancement of glutamate release and postsynaptic potentiation of AMPA receptor-mediated responses. Understanding presynaptic and postsynaptic mechanisms for ACC potentiation may help us to treat chronic pain in near future.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
A great deal of research has been directed toward understanding the cellular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity and memory formation. To this point, most research has focused on the more "active" components of synaptic transmission: presynaptic transmitter release and postsynaptic transmitter receptors. Little work has been done characterizing the role neurotransmitter transporters might play during changes in synaptic efficacy. We review several new experiments that demonstrate glutamate transporters are regulated during changes in the efficacy of glutamatergic synapses. This regulation occurred during long-term facilitation of the sensorimotor synapse of Aplysia and long-term potentiation of the Schaffer-collateral synapse of the rat. We propose that glutamate transporters are "co-regulated" with other molecules/processes involved in synaptic plasticity, and that this process is phylogenetically conserved. These new findings indicate that glutamate transporters most likely play a more active role in neurotransmission than previously believed.  相似文献   

10.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has been implicated in several forms of long-term potentiation (LTP) at different hippocampal synapses. Using two-photon imaging of FM 1-43, a fluorescent marker of synaptic vesicle cycling, we find that BDNF is selectively required for those forms of LTP at Schaffer collateral synapses that recruit a presynaptic component of expression. BDNF-dependent forms of LTP also require activation of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels. One form of LTP with presynaptic expression, theta burst LTP, is thought to be of particular behavioral importance. Using restricted genetic deletion to selectively disrupt BDNF production in either the entire forebrain (CA3 and CA1) or in only the postsynaptic CA1 neuron, we localize the source of BDNF required for LTP to presynaptic neurons. These results suggest that long-term synaptic plasticity has distinct presynaptic and postsynaptic modules. Release of BDNF from CA3 neurons is required to recruit the presynaptic, but not postsynaptic, module of plasticity.  相似文献   

11.
This review summarizes the various experiments that have been carried out to determine if the expression of long-term potentiation (LTP), in particular N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-dependent LTP, is presynaptic or postsynaptic. Evidence for a presynaptic expression mechanism comes primarily from experiments reporting that glutamate overflow is increased during LTP and from experiments showing that the failure rate decreases during LTP. However, other experimental approaches, such as monitoring synaptic glutamate release by recording astrocytic glutamate transporter currents, have failed to detect any change in glutamate release during LTP. In addition, the discovery of silent synapses, in which LTP rapidly switches on alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor function at NMDA-receptor-only synapses, provides a postsynaptic mechanism for the decrease in failures during LTP. It is argued that the preponderance of evidence favours a postsynaptic expression mechanism, whereby NMDA receptor activation results in the rapid recruitment of AMPA receptors as well as a covalent modification of synaptic AMPA receptors.  相似文献   

12.
Long-term potentiation (LTP) of excitatory synaptic transmission in the hippocampus has been investigated in great detail over the past 40 years. Where and how LTP is actually expressed, however, remain controversial issues. Considerable evidence has been offered to support both pre- and postsynaptic contributions to LTP expression. Though it is widely held that postsynaptic expression mechanisms are the primary contributors to LTP expression, evidence for that conclusion is amenable to alternative explanations. Here, we briefly review some key contributions to the ‘locus’ debate and describe data that support a dominant role for presynaptic mechanisms. Recognition of the state-dependency of expression mechanisms, and consideration of the consequences of the spatial relationship between postsynaptic glutamate receptors and presynaptic vesicular release sites, lead to a model that may reconcile views from both sides of the synapse.  相似文献   

13.
Finding the rules underlying how axons of cortical neurons form neural circuits and modify their corresponding synaptic strength is the still subject of intense research. Experiments have shown that internal calcium concentration, and both the precise timing and temporal order of pre and postsynaptic action potentials, are important constituents governing whether the strength of a synapse located on the dendrite is increased or decreased. In particular, previous investigations focusing on spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) have typically observed an asymmetric temporal window governing changes in synaptic efficacy. Such a temporal window emphasizes that if a presynaptic spike, arriving at the synaptic terminal, precedes the generation of a postsynaptic action potential, then the synapse is potentiated; however if the temporal order is reversed, then depression occurs. Furthermore, recent experimental studies have now demonstrated that the temporal window also depends on the dendritic location of the synapse. Specifically, it was shown that in distal regions of the apical dendrite, the magnitude of potentiation was smaller and the window for depression was broader, when compared to observations from the proximal region of the dendrite. To date, the underlying mechanism(s) for such a distance-dependent effect is (are) currently unknown. Here, using the ionic cable theory framework in conjunction with the standard calcium based plasticity model, we show for the first time that such distance-dependent inhomogeneities in the temporal learning window for STDP can be largely explained by both the spatial and active properties of the dendrite.  相似文献   

14.
Plasticity at the cerebellar parallel fiber to Purkinje cell synapse may underlie information processing and motor learning. In vivo, parallel fibers appear to fire in short high frequency bursts likely to activate sparsely distributed synapses over the Purkinje cell dendritic tree. Here, we report that short parallel fiber tetanic stimulation evokes a ∼7–15% depression which develops over 2 min and lasts for at least 20 min. In contrast to the concomitantly evoked short-term endocannabinoid-mediated depression, this persistent posttetanic depression (PTD) does not exhibit a dependency on the spatial pattern of synapse activation and is not caused by any detectable change in presynaptic calcium signaling. This persistent PTD is however associated with increased paired-pulse facilitation and coefficient of variation of synaptic responses, suggesting that its expression is presynaptic. The chelation of postsynaptic calcium prevents its induction, suggesting that post- to presynaptic (retrograde) signaling is required. We rule out endocannabinoid signaling since the inhibition of type 1 cannabinoid receptors, monoacylglycerol lipase or vanilloid receptor 1, or incubation with anandamide had no detectable effect. The persistent PTD is maximal in pre-adolescent mice, abolished by adrenergic and dopaminergic receptors block, but unaffected by adrenergic and dopaminergic agonists. Our data unveils a novel form of plasticity at parallel fiber synapses: a persistent PTD induced by physiologically relevant input patterns, age-dependent, and strongly modulated by the monoaminergic system. We further provide evidence supporting that the plasticity mechanism involves retrograde signaling and presynaptic diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

15.
Remodeling of synaptic actin induced by photoconductive stimulation.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
M A Colicos  B E Collins  M J Sailor  Y Goda 《Cell》2001,107(5):605-616
Use-dependent synapse remodeling is thought to provide a cellular mechanism for encoding durable memories, yet whether activity triggers an actual structural change has remained controversial. We use photoconductive stimulation to demonstrate activity-dependent morphological synaptic plasticity by video imaging of GFP-actin at individual synapses. A single tetanus transiently moves presynaptic actin toward and postsynaptic actin away from the synaptic junction. Repetitive spaced tetani induce glutamate receptor-dependent stable restructuring of synapses. Presynaptic actin redistributes and forms new puncta that label for an active synapse marker FM5-95 within 2 hr. Postsynaptic actin sprouts projections toward the new presynaptic actin puncta, resembling the axon-dendrite interaction during synaptogenesis. Our results indicate that activity-dependent presynaptic structural plasticity facilitates the formation of new active presynaptic terminals.  相似文献   

16.
GABA-mediated synaptic inhibition is crucial in neural circuit operations. In mammalian brains, the development of inhibitory synapses and innervation patterns is often a prolonged postnatal process, regulated by neural activity. Emerging evidence indicates that gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) acts beyond inhibitory transmission and regulates inhibitory synapse development. Indeed, GABA(A) receptors not only function as chloride channels that regulate membrane voltage and conductance but also play structural roles in synapse maturation and stabilization. The link from GABA(A) receptors to postsynaptic and presynaptic adhesion is probably mediated, partly by neuroligin-reurexin interactions, which are potent in promoting GABAergic synapse formation. Therefore, similar to glutamate signaling at excitatory synapse, GABA signaling may coordinate maturation of presynaptic and postsynaptic sites at inhibitory synapses. Defining the many steps from GABA signaling to receptor trafficking/stability and neuroligin function will provide further mechanistic insights into activity-dependent development and possibly plasticity of inhibitory synapses.  相似文献   

17.
EMBO J (2013) 32: 496–510 doi:10.1038/emboj.2012.334; published online January042013Alteration of the efficacy of excitatory synaptic transmission between neurons is a critical element in the processes of learning, memory, and behaviour. Despite decades of research aimed at elucidating basic cellular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity, new pathways and permutations continue to be discovered. Carta et al (2013) now show that activation of the calcium/calmodulin dependent kinase II (CaMKII) induces an unusual postsynaptic form of long-term depression (LTD) at the hippocampal mossy fibre synapse by promoting lateral diffusion of kainate receptors (KARs), a family of ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) that influence pyramidal neuron excitability. This report therefore reveals a new and mechanistically unique way of fine-tuning synaptic plasticity at this central synapse in the hippocampus.Information transfer within the nervous system is regulated at the synaptic level by diverse cellular mechanisms. Synaptic efficacy is not static (i.e., it is ‘plastic''), and the capacity to adjust the strength of communication between neurons in a network has been shown to be a critical component of diverse aspects of brain function that include many forms of behavioural learning (Martin et al, 2000). The complex means by which neurons adjust their synaptic properties in response to changes in local and global activity in the central nervous system has been the subject of intensive investigation spanning multiple decades (Malenka and Bear, 2004; Feldman, 2009). Nonetheless, new mechanisms underlying plasticity of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic transmission continue to be elucidated; these can vary depending on the experimental parameters for induction of plasticity, the particular type of synapse under investigation, and even the prior history of activation at the synapse. Long-term potentiation (LTP) and LTD of excitatory synaptic transmission are two well-known phenomena in which efficacy is increased or decreased, respectively, and at many synapses in the CNS occur through concomitant alterations in the number of postsynaptic iGluRs. The movement of excitatory receptors in and out of synapses, and more generally to and from the neuronal plasma membrane, is dictated by their association with a wide variety of scaffolding and chaperone proteins, whose interactions are often controlled by various protein kinases (Anggono and Huganir, 2012).It is generally appreciated now that long-term synaptic plasticity can be elicited by a variety of mechanisms even within a single type of synaptic connection. In addition to postsynaptic alterations in receptor content, for example, synaptic efficacy can also be tuned by regulated alterations in the probability of vesicular release of the neurotransmitter. Until recently, this presynaptic form of plasticity was thought to be the exclusive mechanism for altering excitatory synaptic strength at a morphologically unusual synapse in the hippocampus formed between large bouton-like presynaptic terminals arising from granule cell axons, or mossy fibres, and proximal dendrites on CA3 pyramidal neurons (Nicoll and Schmitz, 2005). These synaptic connections allow for single dentate granule cells to profoundly influence the likelihood of action potential firing in CA3 pyramidal neurons in a frequency-dependent manner, and for that reason have been referred to as ‘conditional detonator'' synapses (Henze et al, 2002). The precise mechanisms that lead to increased vesicular release probability following LTP-inducing stimulation of mossy fibre axons, including a potential role for retrograde signalling, remain the subject of debate, although there is general consensus that activation of presynaptic protein kinase A (PKA) is a key step in this form of synaptic plasticity (Figure 1A). Enhancing release probability impacts signalling through all three types of iGluRs present at mossy fibre synapses—AMPA, NMDA, and KARs. Recently, however, novel postsynaptic forms of mossy fibre plasticity were discovered in which induction protocols specifically increased the number of NMDA receptors (Kwon and Castillo, 2008; Rebola et al, 2008) or decreased the number of KARs (Selak et al, 2009), expanding the mechanistic repertoire at this historical site of focus of research on presynaptic LTP. Alterations in the synaptic content of particular iGluRs could serve as an additional means to fine-tune synaptic integration at the mossy fibre—CA3 synapse and therefore have important consequences for hippocampal network excitability.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Kainate receptor-dependent plasticity mechanisms at the hippocampal mossy fibre–CA3 synapse. (A) Activation of presynaptic receptors enhances glutamate release from the mossy fibre terminals. (B) A spike-timing-dependent plasticity protocol known to activate postsynaptic CaMKII results in long-term synaptic depression. CaMKII phosphorylates the GluK5 kainate receptor subunit, which uncouples the receptor from PSD-95 in the postsynaptic density. This leads to an increase in receptor mobility and diffusion away from the synapse. (C) Low-frequency stimulation of mossy fibres and activation of postsynaptic group 1 mGluRs leads to activation of PKC, which promotes the association of SNAP-25 to the GluK5 kainate receptor subunit and the subsequent endocytosis of synaptic receptors.In this issue, Carta et al (2013) identify a new postsynaptic mechanism for shaping mossy fibre plasticity that is specific to synaptic KARs, which serve to influence temporal integration of synaptic input as well as pyramidal neuron excitability through modulation of intrinsic ion channels. The authors paired postsynaptic depolarization of CA3 pyramidal neurons with a precisely timed presynaptic release of glutamate in a pattern that is known to produce LTP at many central synapses (Feldman, 2012). At mossy fibre synapses, however, this form of spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) instead caused LTD of KAR-mediated excitatory synaptic potentials (KAR-LTD) while leaving AMPA receptor function unaltered (Figure 1B) (Carta et al, 2013). Using a series of genetic and pharmacological manipulations, Carta et al (2013) found that KAR-LTD was dependent upon the activation of postsynaptic KARs themselves, a rise in postsynaptic Ca2+, and CaMKII phosphorylation of a specific protein component of synaptic KARs, the GluK5 subunit. Unlike other mechanisms of postsynaptic mossy fibre plasticity, KAR-LTD was independent of NMDA or metabotropic glutamate receptor activation. Most surprisingly, KAR-LTD did not require receptor endocytosis from the plasma membrane, as is the case with most other forms of postsynaptic depression of excitatory transmission, including a distinct form of KAR-LTD reported previously (Selak et al, 2009) (Figure 1C). Instead, CaMKII-mediated phosphorylation of GluK5 subunits likely uncoupled receptors from the postsynaptic scaffolding protein PSD-95, which then led to enhanced lateral diffusion of KARs out of mossy fibre synapses. As KAR endocytosis was not altered in mossy fibre STDP, the activity-dependent reduction in KAR signalling was effectively limited to those receptors in the synapse. A molecular replacement strategy was employed using biolistic-based expression of mutant KARs in cultured hippocampal slices prepared from KAR knockout mice, which allowed Carta et al (2013) to corroborate their detailed biochemical studies by showing that reconstituted KAR currents in CA3 neurons expressing recombinant GluK5 phosphorylation site substitutions were unable to express KAR-LTD. In summary, KAR-mediated activation of CaMKII leads to phosphorylation of the GluK5 subunit and subsequent KAR-LTD through enhanced lateral mobility of synaptic receptors (Figure 1B).These findings are intriguing for several reasons. Most notably, they stand in stark contrast to studies in which CaMKII activation primarily triggers potentiation, rather than depression, of excitatory synaptic transmission at other synapses (Lisman et al, 2012). CaMKII recently was shown to cause diffusional trapping of AMPA receptor complexes within the postsynaptic density following phosphorylation of a closely associated auxiliary subunit, stargazin (Opazo et al, 2010), which is precisely the opposite of the effects of activation of the enzyme on KAR mobility at mossy fibre synapses. Further, these divergent consequences are both dependent upon carboxy-terminal PDZ interactions with scaffolding proteins, although in each case further research is needed to dissect out the relevant binding partners that control lateral mobility. It is of interest that KAR-LTD required synaptic activation of KARs to initiate signalling via CaMKII, which implies a tight coupling exists between KARs and the holoenzyme in the mossy fibre postsynaptic density. This observation also raises the possibility that activated CaMKII could phosphorylate other targets to effect other, yet-to-be-discovered, changes in synaptic function. Finally, the report by Carta et al expands our understanding of how excitatory synaptic transmission is fine-tuned at an important central synapse and underscores the fact that even well-trod ground (or synapses) continue to yield surprises that inform our understanding of the remarkable mechanistic diversity underlying synaptic plasticity in the CNS.  相似文献   

18.
Ninan I  Arancio O 《Neuron》2004,42(1):129-141
Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is a multifunctional enzyme that is very critical for synaptic plasticity and memory formation. Although significant progress has been made in understanding the role of postsynaptic CaMKII in synaptic plasticity, very little is known about its presynaptic function during plasticity changes. Here we report that KN-93, a membrane-permeable CaMKII inhibitor, blocked glutamate-induced increases in the frequency of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs) and the number of presynaptic functional boutons in cultured hippocampal pyramidal neurons. In addition, presynaptic injection of the membrane-impermeable CaMKII inhibitor peptide 281-309 blocked synaptic plasticity induced by tetanus, glutamate, or NO/cGMP pathway activation as expressed by long-lasting increases in EPSC amplitude and functional presynaptic boutons. Presynaptic injection of CaMKII itself coupled with weak tetanus produced an immediate and long-lasting enhancement of EPSC amplitude. Thus, the present results conclusively prove that presynaptic CaMKII is essential for synaptic plasticity in cultured hippocampal neurons.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome ten (PTEN) is an important regulator of phosphatidylinositol‐(3,4,5,)‐trisphosphate signalling, which controls cell growth and differentiation. However, PTEN is also highly expressed in the adult brain, in which it can be found in dendritic spines in hippocampus and other brain regions. Here, we have investigated specific functions of PTEN in the regulation of synaptic function in excitatory hippocampal synapses. We found that NMDA receptor activation triggers a PDZ‐dependent association between PTEN and the synaptic scaffolding molecule PSD‐95. This association is accompanied by PTEN localization at the postsynaptic density and anchoring within the spine. On the other hand, enhancement of PTEN lipid phosphatase activity is able to drive depression of AMPA receptor‐mediated synaptic responses. This activity is specifically required for NMDA receptor‐dependent long‐term depression (LTD), but not for LTP or metabotropic glutamate receptor‐dependent LTD. Therefore, these results reveal PTEN as a regulated signalling molecule at the synapse, which is recruited to the postsynaptic membrane upon NMDA receptor activation, and is required for the modulation of synaptic activity during plasticity.  相似文献   

20.
The tripartite synapse denotes the junction of a pre- and postsynaptic neuron modulated by a synaptic astrocyte. Enhanced transmission probability and frequency of the postsynaptic current-events are among the significant effects of the astrocyte on the synapse as experimentally characterized by several groups. In this paper we provide a mathematical framework for the relevant synaptic interactions between neurons and astrocytes that can account quantitatively for both the astrocytic effects on the synaptic transmission and the spontaneous postsynaptic events. Inferred from experiments, the model assumes that glutamate released by the astrocytes in response to synaptic activity regulates store-operated calcium in the presynaptic terminal. This source of calcium is distinct from voltage-gated calcium influx and accounts for the long timescale of facilitation at the synapse seen in correlation with calcium activity in the astrocytes. Our model predicts the inter-event interval distribution of spontaneous current activity mediated by a synaptic astrocyte and provides an additional insight into a novel mechanism for plasticity in which a low fidelity synapse gets transformed into a high fidelity synapse via astrocytic coupling.  相似文献   

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