4.6 Article

Slow excitatory synaptic currents generated by AMPA receptors

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 600, 期 2, 页码 217-232

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP280877

关键词

auxiliary subunits; glutamate; kinetics; short-term plasticity; synaptic diversity

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Heisenberg Professorship [PL619/3-1]
  2. DFG under Germanys Excellence Strategy [EXC-2049 - 390688087]
  3. ERC [647895]
  4. EMBO Long Term Fellowship [ALTF 873-2018]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [647895] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

AMPA receptors, traditionally known for their fast activation and deactivation, have been found to also exhibit slow, persistent responses through interactions with auxiliary subunits. This superactive mode is characterized by a lack of desensitization, resistance to competitive antagonists, and a prolonged current decay. These slow currents can generate accumulating responses to repetitive stimulation, potentially playing a role in short-term potentiation at excitatory synapses. Additionally, slow AMPA currents spanning cognitive time intervals in the theta rhythms have implications for neural computation and synaptic transmission in the nervous system.
Decades of literature indicate that the AMPA-type glutamate receptor is among the fastest acting of all neurotransmitter receptors. These receptors are located at excitatory synapses, and conventional wisdom says that they activate in hundreds of microseconds, deactivate in milliseconds due to their low affinity for glutamate and also desensitize profoundly. These properties circumscribe AMPA receptor activation in both space and time. However, accumulating evidence shows that AMPA receptors can also activate with slow, indefatigable responses. They do so through interactions with auxiliary subunits that are able promote a switch to a high open probability, high-conductance 'superactive' mode. In this review, we show that any assumption that this phenomenon is limited to heterologous expression is false and rather that slow AMPA currents have been widely and repeatedly observed throughout the nervous system. Hallmarks of the superactive mode are a lack of desensitization, resistance to competitive antagonists and a current decay that outlives free glutamate by hundreds of milliseconds. Because the switch to the superactive mode is triggered by activation, AMPA receptors can generate accumulating 'pedestal' currents in response to repetitive stimulation, constituting a postsynaptic mechanism for short-term potentiation in the range 5-100 Hz. Further, slow AMPA currents span 'cognitive' time intervals in the 100 ms range (theta rhythms), of particular interest for hippocampal function, where slow AMPA currents are widely expressed in a synapse-specific manner. Here, we outline the implications that slow AMPA receptors have for excitatory synaptic transmission and computation in the nervous system.

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