4.4 Article

Presynaptic activity and Ca2+ entry are required for the maintenance of NMDA receptor-independent LTP at visual cortical excitatory synapses

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 1077-1087

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00602.2003

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We have shown that some neural activity is required for the maintenance of long-term potentiation (LTP) at visual cortical inhibitory synapses. We tested whether this was also the case in N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-independent LTP of excitatory connections in layer 2/3 cells of developing rat visual cortex. This LTP occurred after 2-Hz stimulation was applied for 15 min and always persisted for several hours while test stimulation was continued at 0.1 Hz. When test stimulation was stopped for 1 h after LTP induction, only one-third of the LTP instances disappeared, but most did disappear under a pharmacological suppression of spontaneous firing, indicating that LTP maintenance requires either evoked or spontaneous activities. LTP was totally abolished by a temporary blockade of action potentials with lidocaine or the removal of extracellular Ca2+ after LTP induction, but it persisted under a voltage clamp of postsynaptic cells or after a temporary blockade of postsynaptic activity with the glutamate receptor antagonist kynurenate, suggesting that LTP maintenance requires presynaptic, but not postsynaptic, firing and Ca2+ entry. More than one-half of the LTP instances were abolished after a pharmacological blockade of P-type Ca2+ channels, whereas it persisted after either L-type or Ni2+-sensitive Ca2+ channel blockades. These results show that the maintenance of NMDA receptor-independent excitatory LTP requires presynaptic firing and Ca2+ channel activation as inhibitory LTP, although the necessary level of firing and Ca2+ entry seems lower for the former than the latter and the Ca2+ channel types involved are only partly the same.

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