4.8 Article

A stable proportion of Purkinje cell inputs from parallel fibers are silent during cerebellar maturation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2024890118

Keywords

cerebellum; memory; synaptic weight; development; quantitative; neuroanatomy

Funding

  1. French National Research Agency [ANR-10-INBS-04]
  2. United Kingdom Medical Research Council [G0600064]
  3. Amidex (Aix-Marseille Universite)
  4. Amidex (Aix-Marseille Universite) ICN (Integrative and Clinical Neuroscience)
  5. Laboratoire d'Excellence SENSES FOR A LIFETIME (LabEx LIFESENSES) [ANR-10-LABX-65]
  6. Institut Hospitalo-Universitaire Enabling Vision Restoration (IHU FOReSIGHT) [ANR-18-IAHU-01]
  7. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
  8. Institut National de la Sante et de la RechercheMedicale
  9. MRC [G0600064] Funding Source: UKRI

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The majority of synapses in the cerebellum of mature mice are silent, playing a crucial role in optimizing information storage capacity and reliability.
Cerebellar Purkinje neurons integrate information transmitted at excitatory synapses formed by granule cells. Although these synapses are considered essential sites for learning, most of them appear not to transmit any detectable electrical information and have been defined as silent. It has been proposed that silent synapses are required to maximize information storage capacity and ensure its reliability, and hence to optimize cerebellar operation. Such optimization is expected to occur once the cerebellar circuitry is in place, during its maturation and the natural and steady improvement of animal agility. We therefore investigated whether the proportion of silent synapses varies over this period, from the third to the sixth postnatal week in mice. Selective expression of a calcium indicator in granule cells enabled quantitative mapping of presynaptic activity, while postsynaptic responses were recorded by patch clamp in acute slices. Through this approach and the assessment of two anatomical features (the distance that separates adjacent planar Purkinje dendritic trees and the synapse density), we determined the average excitatory postsynaptic potential per synapse. Its value was four to eight times smaller than responses from paired recorded detectable connections, consistent with over 70% of synapses being silent. These figures remained remarkably stable across maturation stages. According to the proposed role for silent synapses, our results suggest that information storage capacity and reliability are optimized early during cerebellar maturation. Alternatively, silent synapses may have roles other than adjusting the information storage capacity and reliability.

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