4.5 Article

Reduced sensory-evoked structural plasticity in the aging barrel cortex

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING
Volume 81, Issue -, Pages 222-233

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2019.06.006

Keywords

Dendritic spine; Primary somatosensory cortex; Two-photon imaging; Structural plasticity; Aging; Clustering

Funding

  1. Louisiana Board of Regents Graduate Research Fellowship [LEQSF(2013-18)-GF-17]
  2. National Institute on Aging [R01AG047296]
  3. Louisiana Board of Regents RCS [LEQSF(2016-19)-RD-A-24]
  4. COBRE on Aging and Regenerative Medicine [P20GM103629]

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Impairments in synaptic connectivity have been linked to cognitive deficits in age-related neurode-generative disorders and healthy aging. However, the anatomical and structural bases of these impairments have not been identified yet. A hallmark of neural plasticity in young adults is short-term synaptic rearrangement, yet aged animals already display higher synaptic turnover rates at the baseline. Using two-photon excitation (2PE) microscopy, we explored if this elevated turnover alters the aged brain's response to plasticity. Following a sensory-evoked plasticity protocol involving whisker stimulation, aged mice display reduced spine dynamics (gain, loss, and turnover), decreased spine clustering, and lower spine stability when compared to young adult mice. These results suggest a deficiency of the cortical neurons of aged mice to structurally incorporate new sensory experiences, in the form of clustered, long-lasting synapses, into already existing cortical circuits. This research provides the first evidence linking experience-dependent plasticity with in vivo spine dynamics in the aged brain and supports a model of both reduced synaptic plasticity and reduced synaptic tenacity in the aged somatosensory system. (C) 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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