Structural plasticity of spines at giant mossy fiber synapses

2012 | review. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Structural plasticity of spines at giant mossy fiber synapses​
Zhao, S.; Studer, D.; Chai, X.; Graber, W.; Brose, N. ; Nestel, S.& Young, C. et al.​ (2012)
Frontiers in Neural Circuits, 6​.​
Frontiers Research Foundation. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2012.00103 

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Authors
Zhao, Shanting; Studer, Daniel; Chai, Xuejun; Graber, Werner; Brose, Nils ; Nestel, Sigrun; Young, Christina; Rodriguez, E. Patricia; Saetzler, Kurt; Frotscher, Michael
Abstract
The granule cells of the dentate gyrus give rise to thin unmyelinated axons, the mossy filbers. They form giant presynaptic boutons impinging on large complex spines on the proximal dendritic portions of hilar mossy cells and CA3 pyramidal neurons. While these anatomical characteristics have been known for some time, it remained unclear whether functional changes at mossy fiber synapses such as long-term potentiation (LTP) are associated with structural changes. Since sublte structural changes may escape a fine-structural analysis when the tissue is fixed by using aldehydes and is dehydrated in ethanol, rapid high-pressure freezing (HPF) of the tissue was applied. Slice cultures of hippocampus were prepared and incubated in vitro for 2 weeks. Then, chemical LTP (cLTP) was induced by the application of 25mM tetraethylammonium (TEA) for 10 min. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from CA3 pyramidal neurons revealed a highly significant potenetiation of mossy fiber synapses when compared to control conditions before the application of TFA. Next the slice cultures were sujected to HPF, cryosubstitution, and embedding in Epon for a fine-structural analysis. When compared to control tissue, we noticed a significant decrease of synaptic vesicles in mossy fiber boutons and a concomitant increase in the length of the presynaptic membrane. On the postsynaptic side, we observed the formation of small, finger-like protrusions, emanating from the large complex spines. These short protrusions gave rise to active zones that were shorter than those normally found on the thorny excrescences. However, the total number of active zones was significantly increased. Of note, none of these cLTP-induced structural changes was observed in slice cultures from Munc13-1 deficient mouse mutants showing severly impaired vesicle priming and docking. In conclusion, application of HPF allowed us to monitor cLTP-induced structural reorganization of mossy fiber synampses.
Issue Date
2012
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Journal
Frontiers in Neural Circuits 
ISSN
1662-5110

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