4.7 Article

Development of Glutamatergic Proteins in Human Visual Cortex across the Lifespan

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 25, Pages 6031-6042

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2304-16.2017

Keywords

development; glutamate; human; receptors; synaptic proteins; visual cortex

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council [RGPIN-2015-06215]
  2. Woodburn Heron OGS
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council PGS
  4. OCE

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Traditionally, human primary visual cortex (V1) has been thought to mature within the first few years of life, based on anatomical studies of synapse formation, and establishment of intracortical and intercortical connections. Human vision, however, develops well beyond the first few years. Previously, we found prolonged development of some GABAergic proteins in human V1 (Pinto et al., 2010). Yet as >80% of synapses in V1 are excitatory, it remains unanswered whether the majority of synapses regulating experience-dependent plasticity and receptive field properties develop late, like their inhibitory counterparts. To address this question, we used Western blotting of postmortem tissue from human V1 (12 female, 18 male) covering a range of ages. Then we quantified a set of postsynaptic glutamatergic proteins (PSD-95, GluA2, GluN1, GluN2A, GluN2B), calculated indices for functional pairs that are developmentally regulated (GluA2: GluN1; GluN2A: GluN2B), and determined interindividual variability. We found early loss of GluN1, prolonged development of PSD-95 and GluA2 into late childhood, protracted development of GluN2A until similar to 40 years, and dramatic loss of GluN2A in aging. The GluA2: GluN1 index switched at similar to 1 year, but the GluN2A: GluN2B index continued to shift until similar to 40 year before changing back to GluN2B in aging. We also identified young childhood as a stage of heightened interindividual variability. The changes show that human V1 develops gradually through a series of five orchestrated stages, making it likely that V1 participates in visual development and plasticity across the lifespan.

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