Abstract

Changes in synaptic efficacies need to be long-lasting in order to serve as a substrate for memory. Experimentally, synaptic plasticity exhibits phases covering the induction of long-term potentiation and depression (LTP/LTD) during the early phase of synaptic plasticity, the setting of synaptic tags, a trigger process for protein synthesis, and a slow transition leading to synaptic consolidation during the late phase of synaptic plasticity. We present a mathematical model that describes these different phases of synaptic plasticity. The model explains a large body of experimental data on synaptic tagging and capture, cross-tagging, and the late phases of LTP and LTD. Moreover, the model accounts for the dependence of LTP and LTD induction on voltage and presynaptic stimulation frequency. The stabilization of potentiated synapses during the transition from early to late LTP occurs by protein synthesis dynamics that are shared by groups of synapses. The functional consequence of this shared process is that previously stabilized patterns of strong or weak synapses onto the same postsynaptic neuron are well protected against later changes induced by LTP/LTD protocols at individual synapses.

Keywords

Long-term potentiationSynaptic plasticityMetaplasticityNeuroscienceSynaptic augmentationSynaptic fatigueLTP inductionNonsynaptic plasticityNeuronal memory allocationMemory consolidationSynaptic scalingPostsynaptic potentialHomosynaptic plasticityExcitatory postsynaptic potentialPost-tetanic potentiationNeural facilitationInhibitory postsynaptic potentialBiologyHippocampusBiochemistryReceptor

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
4
Issue
12
Pages
e1000248-e1000248
Citations
153
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Claudia Clopath, Lorric Ziegler, Eleni Vasilaki et al. (2008). Tag-Trigger-Consolidation: A Model of Early and Late Long-Term-Potentiation and Depression. PLoS Computational Biology , 4 (12) , e1000248-e1000248. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000248

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DOI
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000248