Activity-dependent history in hippocampal neurons dictates temporal dynamics of homeostatic synaptic scaling
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Neural circuits utilize a host of homeostatic plasticity mechanisms, including synaptic scaling, to maintain stability in circuits undergoing experience-dependent remodeling necessary for information processing. During synaptic scaling, compensatory adaptations in synaptic strength are induced after chronic manipulations in neuronal firing, but our understanding of this process is largely limited to its initial induction. How these homeostatic synaptic adaptations evolve when activity renormalizes and their impact on subsequent homeostatic compensation are both poorly understood. To examine these issues, we investigated whether a previous history of homeostatic scaling in networks of cultured hippocampal neurons altered their subsequent homeostatic responses to chronic activity manipulations. Unexpectedly, we found that a history of synaptic scaling strongly suppressed future scaling to the same, and even opposite, activity challenges. This history-dependent suppression was specific for future homeostatic compensation, as networks with a prior scaling history showed no deficits in the chemical induction of long-term potentiation (cLTP), a Hebbian form of synaptic plasticity. Hippocampal neurons with a prior scaling history exhibited normal engagement of activity-dependent signaling during subsequent activity challenges (as assessed by examination of the ERK/MAPK pathway) but demonstrated widespread alterations in activity-dependent transcriptional
ORGANISM(S): Rattus norvegicus
PROVIDER: GSE180993 | GEO | 2024/09/01
REPOSITORIES: GEO
ACCESS DATA