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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Dynamic Regulation of Synaptic Transmission onto Serotonin Neurons by Antidepressants

Geddes, Sean D January 2012 (has links)
Antidepressants are generally believed to exert their clinical efficacy by enhancing 5-HT transmission. Interestingly, sustained administration of selective serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) strongly suppresses in the first few days the firing activity of 5-HT neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN), thereby severely hampering the increase of 5-HT in target regions. Remarkably, the firing activity of 5-HT neurons gradually recovers over the time course of treatment and this recovery is believed to be accounted for by the desensitization of 5-HT1A somatodendritic autoreceptors. Here, we sought to investigate whether additional mechanisms might contribute to the dynamic regulation of excitability of 5-HT neurons during the course of SSRI treatments. Borrowing from the well-described homeostatic strengthening of glutamatergic synapses onto cortical pyramidal neurons following prolonged periods of inactivity, we hypothesized that a similar homeostatic-like regulation of synaptic strength might be operant on 5-HT cells during an SSRI treatment. To test this possibility, we used whole-cell electrophysiological recordings on acute midbrain slices to monitor glutamatergic synapses onto 5-HT neurons. We found that a two-day treatment with the SSRI citalopram induced a robust reduction in both the amplitude and frequency of AMPAR-mediated mEPSCs. We also show that this depression in synaptic strength, induced by an SSRI, is transient since excitatory drive onto 5-HT neurons was enhanced by 7 days of treatments. Altogether, these results document a dynamic regulation of glutamatergic synaptic transmission during the time course of a prolonged treatment with an SSRI. Further elucidation of the cellular and molecular mechanisms driving this synaptic plasticity might identify novel pharmacological target to shorten the delay of antidepressant action.
12

Regulation of homeostatic synaptic plasticity by amyloid Beta in cultured rat hippocampal neurons

Gilbert, James Patrick 22 January 2016 (has links)
Accumulation of amyloid beta (Aβ) in the brain is a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and has been shown to lead to synaptic dysfunction and cognitive decline. Recent studies have indicated synapse dysfunction as an early pathology in AD, but how synaptic function is altered by Aβ remains unclear. We hypothesize that neuronal functional stability may be altered by Aβ via dysregulation of homeostatic synaptic plasticity (HSP), a negative-feedback-based regulation that serves to restrain neuronal activity within a physiological range. Here, I show that Aβ can regulate HSP in response to activity deprivation with an over scaling up of postsynaptic AMPAR expression and excitatory synaptic currents. Aβ treatment during activity deprivation increases the surface expression of both calcium-permeable (Cp), GluA2-lacking (CpAMPARs) and regular, GluA2-containing AMPARs. This in turn may make neurons more vulnerable to neuronal injury after a toxic glutamatergic challenge. Homeostatic synaptic scaling requires the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway and expression of CpAMPARs. Consistent with this, I found that blockade of either PI3K or CpAMPARs occludes over-scaling in the presence of Aβ, suggesting that the enhancement of HSP is mediated through homeostatic mechanisms. Furthermore, challenging neurons with glutamate after Aβ-mediated enhancement of HSP shows increased neuronal death. These findings provide a novel mechanism by which Aβ alters neuronal plasticity and calcium homeostasis in the brain, suggesting that the HSP pathway may be a target in clinical treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
13

Analysis of the activation of AMPA-type glutamate receptors at the single-channel level

Braunbeck, Sebastian 23 February 2022 (has links)
Ionotrope Glutamatrezeptoren steuern exzitatorische Prozesse im Gehirn. Der AMPA-Rezeptor ist der schnellste Glutamatrezeptor und reguliert die Signaltransduktion in hochfrequenten Bereichen. Um die Konformationen des Rezeptors für die Aktivierung aufzuschlüsseln, wurden die Ligandenbindedomänen (LBD), mit künstlichen Metallbrücken verlinkt. Die tetramerische LBD-Schicht hat mehrere Freiheitsgrade. Sie reichen vom Schließen der LBD durch Ligandenbindung, bis hin zu den verschiedenen Konformationsmöglichkeiten innerhalb des Tetramers. Die bereits publizierte T1-Mutante wurde verlinkt und auf Einzelkanalebene elektrophysiologisch untersucht. Anschließend wurde T1 mit einer Mutante (DKD-3H) verglichen die durch molekulardynamische Simulationen identifiziert wurde. Die Eigenschaften von T1 und DKD-3H wurden mit einem natürlich vorkommenden AMPAR-Linker, namens Con ikot ikot, verglichen. Meeresschnecken der Gattung Conus setzen das Polypeptid zur Fischjagd ein. Zur Analyse wurde eine Software entwickelt, speziell für Ströme von ligandengesteuerten Ionenkanälen mit multiplen Leitfähigkeiten (www.github.com/AGPlested/ASCAM). Durch Verlinkung in T1 konnten drei präaktive Konformationen aufgeschlüsselt werden und die schnelle Aktivierung im sub-Millisekundenbereich verschwindet ganz. Obwohl die Metall-koordinierenden Residuen von T1 und DKD-3H nah beieinander liegen, konnte für DKD-3H nur eine einzelne präaktive Konformation gefunden werden. Es deutet darauf hin, dass die LBD-Schicht von AMPA-Rezeptoren hochdynamisch ist da die geringe Abweichung große Auswirkungen auf den Phänotypen des Rezeptors hat. LBD-Verlinkung mit Con-ikot-ikot ergab einen EC50 von ~5 nM. Alle drei Verlinkungsarten resultierten in einer reduzierten Offenwahrscheinlichkeit. Einzelkanalanalysen von T1 und Con-ikot-ikot-gebundenen AMPA-Rezeptoren unterstützen die Hypothese, dass die veränderten Phänotypen aus dem Wechselspiel der LBDs innerhalb der LBD-Schicht resultieren. / Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) mediate excitatory neurotransmission in the mammalian brain. The AMPA-type receptor is the fastest iGluR member, activating at the sub-millisecond time scale. In this study, ligand-binding domains (LBDs), where AMPAR activation is initialised, were cross-linked with artificially introduced metal bridges to trap and investigate conformational states of the receptor before- and during activation. The tetrameric LBD layer has multiple degrees of freedom, from closure of individual clamshells and their conformational arrangement within the dimers and the tetramer. The previously studied T1 mutant was cross-linked at the single-channel level and compared to a second cross-linking mutant (DKD 3H) that was predicted on a molecular dynamics approach. T1 and DKD 3H were to the effects of a naturally occurring AMPAR-specific LBD cross-linker (Con ikot ikot) from a fish-hunting snail of the genus Conus. Single-channel recordings were analysed with a newly developed software dedicated to ligand-gated ion channels with conductances in the low pA range and multiple subconductance levels (www.github.com/AGPlested/ASCAM). Trapping of the T1 mutant revealed three pre-active conformational states that were not described for AMPARs before. Fast activation in the sub-millisecond range disappears fully indicating that these conformations proceed too fast in non-restricted wild-type receptors to be resolved. Although the metal-coordinating residues of T1 and DKD 3H are in close proximity, DKD 3H yielded one single pre-active state. A slightly distinct register of the bridge results in largely different phenotypes. Cross-linking with con ikot ikot identified an EC50 of ~5 nM. All three cross-linking approaches reduced open probability. The results support the hypothesis that the altered phenotypes are not a result of singly restricted LBDs but the dynamics of the tetrameric LBD-layer as one unit.
14

Rôle du transporteur neuronal Potassium/Chlore KCC2 dans la plasticité des synapses glutamatergiques / Involvement of the neuronal K/Cl cotransporter KCC2 in the plasticity of glutamatergic synapses

Chevy, Quentin 16 January 2015 (has links)
L'efficacité de la transmission synaptique GABAergique est influencée par la concentration intracellulaire en ions chlorure. Dans les neurones matures, l'extrusion de ces ions par le transporteur neuronal potassium chlore de type 2 (KCC2) permet l'influx d'ions chlorure lors de l'activation des récepteurs du GABA de type A. Néanmoins, KCC2 est aussi enrichi à proximité des synapses excitatrices portées par les épines dendritiques qui correspondent à des protrusions dendritiques enrichies en actine. Alors que l'effet d'une suppression de KCC2 sur l'homéostasie des ions chlorure et la transmission GABAergique est largement documenté, peu de choses sont connues sur l'impact qu'une telle suppression peut avoir sur la transmission glutamatergique. Lors de ma thèse, j'ai exploré le rôle de KCC2 dans la potentialisation à long terme (LTP) de la transmission glutamatergique à l'origine des phénomènes d'apprentissage et de mémorisation. Ce travail a révélé que la suppression de KCC2 compromet les modifications fonctionnelles et structurales sous-tendant la LTP. Cet effet est associé à une inhibition de la cofilin, protéine responsable de la dépolymérisation de l'actine, qui corrèle avec une augmentation de la quantité d'actine filamenteuse dans les épines dendritiques. En empêchant l'inhibition de la cofilin liée à l'absence de KCC2, il m'a alors été possible de restaurer la LTP suggérant que KCC2 pourrait influencer cette forme de plasticité en régulant la dynamique de polymérisation du cytosquelette d'actine. Mes résultats démontrent que la fonction de KCC2 va au-delà du contrôle de l'homéostasie des ions chlorure et influence les mécanismes de plasticité de la synapse excitatrice. / The polarity and efficacy of GABAergic synaptic transmission are both influenced by the intra-neuronal chloride concentration. In mature neurons, chloride extrusion through the neuronal K/Cl cotransporter KCC2 allows an inhibitory influx of chloride upon activation of GABAA receptors. Nevertheless, KCC2 is enriched in the vicinity of excitatory synapses within the dendritic spines that are actin-rich protrusions emerging from dendritic shafts. While it has become clear that KCC2 suppression alters chloride homeostasis and GABA signaling, little is known on its impact on glutamatergic transmission. In the laboratory, we have previously demonstrated that KCC2 suppression in mature neurons leads to decreased glutamatergic transmission efficacy through an ion-transport independent function of KCC2. During my PhD, I have explored how KCC2 may also impact LTP of glutamatergic synapses. My work reveals that KCC2 suppression compromises both functional and structural LTP at these synapses. This effect is associated with inhibition of the actin-severing protein cofilin and enhanced mobilization of F-actin in dendritic spines. Since LTP can be rescued by preventing cofilin inhibition upon KCC2 suppression, I suggest KCC2 might influence LTP through altered actin cytoskeleton dynamics. My results demonstrate that KCC2 function extends beyond the mere control of neuronal chloride homoeostasis and suggest regulation of KCC2 membrane stability may act as a metaplastic switch to gate long term plasticity at excitatory synapses in cortical neurons.
15

Cross-talk and regulation between glutamate and GABAB receptors

Kantamneni, Sriharsha 23 March 2015 (has links)
Yes / Brain function depends on co-ordinated transmission of signals from both excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters acting upon target neurons. NMDA, AMPA and mGluR receptors are the major subclasses of glutamate receptors that are involved in excitatory transmission at synapses, mechanisms of activity dependent synaptic plasticity, brain development and many neurological diseases. In addition to canonical role of regulating presynaptic release and activating postsynaptic potassium channels, GABAB receptors also regulate glutamate receptors. There is increasing evidence that metabotropic GABAB receptors are now known to play an important role in modulating the excitability of circuits throughout the brain by directly influencing different types of postsynaptic glutamate receptors. Specifically, GABAB receptors affect the expression, activity and signaling of glutamate receptors under physiological and pathological conditions. Conversely, NMDA receptor activity differentially regulates GABAB receptor subunit expression, signaling and function. In this review I will describe how GABAB receptor activity influence glutamate receptor function and vice versa. Such a modulation has widespread implications for the control of neurotransmission, calcium-dependent neuronal function, pain pathways and in various psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases.
16

Hippocampal metabotropic glutamate receptor long-term depression in health and disease: focus on mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways

Sanderson, T.M., Hogg, Ellen L., Collingridge, G.L., Corrêa, Sonia A.L. 05 April 2016 (has links)
Yes / Group I metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) dependent long-term depression (LTD) is a major form of synaptic plasticity underlying learning and memory. The molecular mechanisms involved in mGluR-LTD have been investigated intensively for the last two decades. In this 60th anniversary special issue article, we review the recent advances in determining the mechanisms that regulate the induction, transduction and expression of mGluR-LTD in the hippocampus, with a focus on the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways. In particular we discuss the requirement of p38 MAPK and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK 1/2) activation. The recent advances in understanding the signaling cascades regulating mGluR-LTD are then related to the cognitive impairments observed in neurological disorders, such as fragile X syndrome and Alzheimer's disease.
17

Does the MK2-dependent production of TNFα regulate mGluR-dependent synaptic plasticity?

Hogg, Ellen L., Muller, Jurgen, Corrêa, Sonia A.L. 07 January 2016 (has links)
Yes / The molecular mechanisms and signalling cascades that trigger the induction of group I metabotropic glutamate receptor (GI-mGluR)-dependent long-term depression (LTD) have been the subject of intensive investigation for nearly two decades. The generation of genetically modified animals has played a crucial role in elucidating the involvement of key molecules regulating the induction and maintenance of mGluR-LTD. In this review we will discuss the requirement of the newly discovered MAPKAPK-2 (MK2) and MAPKAPK-3 (MK3) signalling cascade in regulating GI-mGluR-LTD. Recently, it has been shown that the absence of MK2 impaired the induction of GI-mGluR-dependent LTD, an effect that is caused by reduced internalization of AMPA receptors (AMPAR). As the MK2 cascade directly regulates tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) production, this review will examine the evidence that the release of TNFα acts to regulate glutamate receptor expression and therefore may play a functional role in the impairment of GI-mGluRdependent LTD and the cognitive deficits observed in MK2/3 double knockout animals. The strong links of increased TNFα production in both aging and neurodegenerative disease could implicate the action of MK2 in these processes. / This work was supported by the BBSRC-BB/H018344/1 to S.A.L.C.
18

Role of the different domains of PSD-95 in basal synaptic transmission

Bonnet, A.D. Stéphanie 23 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
19

De la diffusion latérale des récepteurs AMPA à la perception des whiskers : un nouveau modèle de cartographie corticale / From AMPAR lateral diffusion to whisker perception : a new model for cortical remapping

Campelo, Tiago 07 October 2019 (has links)
Les champs récepteurs corticaux se réorganisent en réponse aux changements de l'environnement. Par exemple, suite à une lésion périphérique, les modalités sensorielles préservées gagnent de l'espace cortical au détriment de celles lésées. L'étude du cortex somatosensoriel en tonneau des rongeurs a fourni des données importantes pour la compréhension des mécanismes synaptiques à l'origine de cette réorganisation corticale. En condition normale, les neurones de chaque colonne corticale répondent préférentiellement à la stimulation d'une seule vibrisse principale ("Principal Whisker, PW"). Au contraire, suite à l'amputation de l'ensemble des vibrisses sauf une ("Single Whisker Experience, SWE"), les neurones des colonnes associées aux vibrisses amputées répondent à la stimulation de la vibrisse conservée, à l'origine du renforcement et de l'expansion des représentations corticales des vibrisses conservées. Bien que des preuves indirectes aient révélées un rôle de la potentialisation à long terme ("Long-Term Potentiation, LTP") de synapses préexistantes dans la modification des cartes corticales, probablement via une augmentation du nombre des récepteurs AMPA (AMPARs) aux synapses, un lien direct entre la LTP, la réorganisation des cartes corticales, et l'adaptation des comportements sensori-moteurs suite à une altération des entrées sensorielles n'a pas encore été démontré. L'objectif de cette thèse a donc été de mettre en évidence cette relation de façon expérimentale et en condition physiologique. Pour cela, nous avons mis au point une stratégie in vivo combinant des enregistrements électrophysiologiques, de l'imagerie biphotonique et l'analyse du comportement d'exploration chez la souris contrôle ("Full Whisker Experience, FWE) et amputée de certaines vibrisses (SWE). Nous avons d'abord confirmé que la stimulation rythmique de la PW ("Rhytmic Whisker Swtimulation, RWS") renforce les synapses excitatrices (RWS-LTP) in vivo des souris anesthésiées FWE. Au contraire des souris FWE, les neurones pyramidaux des souris SWE présentent une augmentation de l'excitabilité neuronale et une absence de RWS-LTP, indiquant ainsi que les synapses corticales associées à la vibrisse intacte ont été potentialisées en réponse au protocole SWE. Pour mieux comprendre l'implication de la RWS-LTP dans la réorganisation des cartes corticales et l'adaptation des comportements sensori-moteurs, nous avons développé une nouvelle approche pour manipuler la LTP in vivo grâce à l'immobilisation des AMPARs par des anticorps extracellulaires ("cross-linking"). En effet, notre équipe a montré précédemment que le cross-linking des AMPARs empêche la LTP in vitro. Par ailleurs, une accumulation des AMPARs au niveau post-synaptique a été démontrée in vivo par imagerie biphotonique au cours d'une stimulation RWS, suggérant un rôle de la mobilité de ces récepteurs dans cette RWS-LTP. Au cours de cette thèse, nous avons démontré que le cross-linking des AMPARs in vivo bloque également l'expression de la RWS-LTP, mais sans affecter la transmission synaptique basale, ni l'induction de la RWS-LTP, indiquant ainsi que la mobilité des AMPARs est également fondamental pour l'expression de la LTP in vivo. De façon importante, le cross-linking des AMPARs de façon chronique, au cours du SWE, permet non seulement de rétablir la RWS-LTP et l'excitabilité neuronale, et donc de bloquer la réorganisation corticale, mais aussi de modifier les capacités de récupération sensori-motrices des souris amputées. Dans l'ensemble, nos données démontrent pour la première fois un rôle critique et direct de la RWS-LTP dans le réarrangement des circuits en réponse à l'amputation de certaines vibrisses. La réorganisation des cartes corticales serait ainsi assurée par le renforcement de la transmission synaptique, et constituerait alors un mécanisme compensatoire pour optimiser le comportement sensorimoteur de l'animal lors de l'altération des entrées sensorielles. / Neuronal receptive fields in the cerebral cortex change in response to peripheral injury, with active modalities gaining cortical space at the expense of less active ones. Experiments on the mouse whisker-to-barrel cortex system provided important evidences about the synaptic mechanisms driving this cortical remapping. Under normal conditions, neurons in each barrel-column have receptive fields that are strongly tuned towards one principal whisker (PW). However, trimming all the whiskers except one (single-whisker experience, SWE) causes layer (L) 2/3 pyramidal neurons located in the deprived and spared-related columns to increase their response towards the spared input. This results in a strengthening and expansion of the spared whisker representation within the barrel sensory map. Indirect evidences suggest that these cortical alterations might depend on the activity-dependent potentiation of pre-existing excitatory synapses (LTP), likely through increased levels of postsynaptic AMPA receptors (AMPARs). However, a clear link between LTP, cortical remapping, and the adaptation of sensorimotor skills following altered sensory experience has not yet convincingly been demonstrated. Here, we combined in vivo whole-cell recordings, 2-Photon calcium imaging and a whisker-dependent behavior protocol to directly demonstrate this relationship. It has been described that rhythmic whisker stimulation potentiates cortical synapses (RWS-LTP) in vivo. An accumulation of postsynaptic AMPARs during similar sensory stimulation was also reported by imaging evidences. Our data demonstrates that this potentiation is occluded by SWE, suggesting that cortical synapses are already potentiated by this trimming protocol. This is translated into an increased neuronal excitability in the spared column and sensorimotor recovery by the spared whisker. To better understand the implication of LTP in cortical remapping, we developed a novel approach to manipulate LTP in vivo without affecting overall circuit properties. Our team showed previously that the blockage of AMPARs synaptic recruitment by extracellular antibody cross-linking prevents LTP in vitro. Here, we report that in vivo cross-linking of AMPARs blocks the expression but not the induction of RWS-LTP, suggesting that the synaptic recruitment of AMPARs is fundamental for in vivo LTP as well. Moreover, chronic AMPAR cross-linking during SWE reverts RWS-LTP occlusion and the increased neuronal excitability caused by whisker trimming. As consequence, the sensorimotor performance by the spared whisker is permanently impaired by the blockage of cortical remapping. Altogether, these evidences led us to define a critical role for synaptic LTP on circuit re-arrangement after whisker trimming. Our data shows that LTP-driven cortical remapping is a compensatory mechanism to optimize animal’s sensorimotor behavior upon altered sensory experience.
20

The Neural Substrate of Sex Pheromone Signalling in Male Goldfish (Carassius auratus)

Lado, Wudu E. 26 October 2012 (has links)
The transmission of sex pheromone-mediated signals is essential for goldfish reproduction. However, the neural pathways underlying this reproductive signalling pathway in the goldfish brain is not well described. Lesioning experiments have shown previously that two brain areas, the preoptic area (POA) and the ventral telencephali pars ventralis (Vv) in particular, are important for reproduction. We used patch clamp electrophysiology to study the electrical activities of POA and Vv neurons. Based on the intrinsic properties of these neurons, we suggest there are five different functional classes of POA neurons and a single class of Vv neurons. In addition, by electrically stimulating the olfactory bulb (OB), we were able to show that this primary sensory structure makes monosynaptic glutamatergic connections with both POA and Vv neurons. While electrophysiology measures signalling events occurring at short time scales on the order of milliseconds to minutes, we were also interested in studying sex pheromone signalling in the goldfish brain over a long time scale. Thus, we describe changes in gene expression in male goldfish exposed to waterborne sex pheromones (17alpha,20beta dihydroxy-4-pregene-3-one and Prostaglandin-F2alpha) over 6 hours. We perform cDNA microarrays on Prostaglandin-F2alpha-treated fish to study the rapid modulation of transcription and define the signalling pathways affected. Our microarrays showed that 71 genes were differentially regulated (67 up and 4 down). Through gene ontology enrichment analysis, we found that these genes were involved in various biological processes such as RNA processing, neurotransmission, neuronal development, apoptosis, cellular metabolism and sexual reproduction. RT-PCRs were performed to validate our microarrays and to facilitate direct comparisons of the effects of the two sex pheromones, 17alpha,20beta dihydroxy-4-pregene-3-one and Prostaglandin-F2alpha. By combining electrophysiology and gene expression analyses, we were able to study sex-pheromone signalling on two different time scales. One short, occurring on the order of milliseconds to minutes, that involves electrical activities in the brain through the glutamatergic amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors; and the other long occurring several hours later that involves changes in the gene expression levels of calmodulin and ependymin among other genes underlying neuroplasticity. Reproductive neuroplasticity in the goldfish may therefore require the activation of glutamatergic receptors which then activate downstream signals like calmodulin and ependymin to transform the sex pheromones-mediate signal into gene expression.

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