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Activity-dependent modulation of NMDA receptors by endogenous zinc shapes dendritic function in cortical neurons.


ABSTRACT: NMDA receptors (NMDARs) have been proposed to control single-neuron computations in vivo. However, whether specific mechanisms regulate the function of such receptors and modulate input-output transformations performed by cortical neurons under in vivo-like conditions is understudied. Here, we report that in layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons (L2/3 PNs), repeated synaptic stimulation results in an activity-dependent decrease in NMDAR function by vesicular zinc. Such a mechanism shifts the threshold for dendritic non-linearities and strongly reduces LTP. Modulation of NMDARs is cell and pathway specific, being present selectively in L2/3-L2/3 connections but absent in inputs originating from L4 neurons. Numerical simulations highlight that activity-dependent modulation of NMDARs influences dendritic computations, endowing L2/3 PN dendrites with the ability to sustain non-linear integrations constant across different regimes of synaptic activity like those found in vivo. Our results unveil vesicular zinc as an important endogenous modulator of dendritic function in cortical PNs.

SUBMITTER: Morabito A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8889438 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Activity-dependent modulation of NMDA receptors by endogenous zinc shapes dendritic function in cortical neurons.

Morabito Annunziato A   Zerlaut Yann Y   Serraz Benjamin B   Sala Romain R   Paoletti Pierre P   Rebola Nelson N  

Cell reports 20220201 8


NMDA receptors (NMDARs) have been proposed to control single-neuron computations in vivo. However, whether specific mechanisms regulate the function of such receptors and modulate input-output transformations performed by cortical neurons under in vivo-like conditions is understudied. Here, we report that in layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons (L2/3 PNs), repeated synaptic stimulation results in an activity-dependent decrease in NMDAR function by vesicular zinc. Such a mechanism shifts the threshold for  ...[more]

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