4.7 Article

Experience-Dependent Switch in Sign and Mechanisms for Plasticity in Layer 4 of Primary Visual Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 31, Pages 10562-10573

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0622-12.2012

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health Grant [R01 EY019885]
  2. Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund

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Neural circuits are extensively refined by sensory experience during postnatal development. How the maturation of recurrent cortical synapses may contribute to events regulating the postnatal refinement of neocortical microcircuits remains controversial. Here we show that, in the main input layer of rat primary visual cortex, layer 4 (L4), recurrent excitatory synapses are endowed with multiple, developmentally regulated mechanisms for induction and expression of excitatory synaptic plasticity. Maturation of L4 synapses and visual experience lead to a sharp switch in sign and mechanisms for plasticity at recurrent excitatory synapses in L4 at the onset of the critical period for visual cortical plasticity. The state of maturation of excitatory pyramidal neurons allows neurons to engage different mechanisms for plasticity in response to the same induction paradigm. Experience is determinant for the maturation of L4 synapses, as well as for the transition between forms of plasticity and the mechanisms they may engage. These results indicate a tight correlation between the effects of sensory drive and maturation on cortical neurons and provide a new set of cellular mechanisms engaged in the postnatal refinement of cortical circuits.

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