4.7 Article

Local accumulation times in a diffusion-trapping model of receptor dynamics at proximal axodendritic synapses

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 105, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.105.064407

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The lateral diffusion and trapping of neurotransmitter receptors within the postsynaptic membrane of a neuron are crucial for synaptic strength and plasticity. This paper introduces a method to analyze the dynamics of synapses in a diffusion-trapping model of receptor trafficking, revealing the independence of steady-state synaptic weights and the influence of local accumulation times on synaptic plasticity.
The lateral diffusion and trapping of neurotransmitter receptors within the postsynaptic membrane of a neuron play a key role in determining synaptic strength and plasticity. Trapping is mediated by the reversible binding of receptors to scaffolding proteins (slots) within a synapse. In this paper we introduce a method for analyzing the transient dynamics of proximal axodendritic synapses in a diffusion-trapping model of receptor trafficking. Given a population of spatially distributed synapses, each of which has a fixed number of slots, we calculate the rate of relaxation to the steady-state distribution of bound slots (synaptic weights) in terms of a set of local accumulation times. Assuming that the rates of exocytosis and endocytosis are sufficiently slow, we show that the steady-state synaptic weights are independent of each other (purely local). On the other hand, the local accumulation time of a given synapse depends on the number of slots and the spatial location of all the synapses, indicating a form of transient heterosynaptic plasticity. This suggests that local accumulation time measurements could provide useful information regarding the distribution of synaptic weights within a dendrite.

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