Ultrastructural Evidence for a Role of Astrocytes and Glycogen-Derived Lactate in Learning-Dependent Synaptic Stabilization

Author:

Vezzoli E123,Calì C1ORCID,De Roo M4,Ponzoni L3,Sogne E1,Gagnon N1,Francolini M3,Braida D3,Sala M5,Muller D4,Falqui A1ORCID,Magistretti P J1

Affiliation:

1. Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering (BESE) Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), 23955-6900 Thuwal, Saudi Arabia

2. Dipartimento di Bioscienze, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milano, Italy

3. Dipartimento di Biotecnologie Mediche e Medicina Traslazionale, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milano, Italy

4. Department of Basic Neuroscience, University of Geneva Medical School, 1206 Geneva, Switzerland

5. CNR, Institute of Neuroscience, 20129 Milano, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Long-term memory formation (LTM) is a process accompanied by energy-demanding structural changes at synapses and increased spine density. Concomitant increases in both spine volume and postsynaptic density (PSD) surface area have been suggested but never quantified in vivo by clear-cut experimental evidence. Using novel object recognition in mice as a learning task followed by 3D electron microscopy analysis, we demonstrate that LTM induced all aforementioned synaptic changes, together with an increase in the size of astrocytic glycogen granules, which are a source of lactate for neurons. The selective inhibition of glycogen metabolism in astrocytes impaired learning, affecting all the related synaptic changes. Intrahippocampal administration of l-lactate rescued the behavioral phenotype, along with spine density within 24 hours. Spine dynamics in hippocampal organotypic slices undergoing theta burst-induced long-term potentiation was similarly affected by inhibition of glycogen metabolism and rescued by l-lactate. These results suggest that learning primes astrocytic energy stores and signaling to sustain synaptic plasticity via l-lactate.

Funder

KAUST-EPFL Alliance for Brain Energy Metabolism

KAUST Baseline

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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