Author:
Daoudal Gaël,Debanne Dominique
Abstract
Spatio-temporal configurations of distributed activity in the brain is
thought to contribute to the coding of neuronal information and synaptic
contacts between nerve cells could play a central role in the formation of
privileged pathways of activity. Synaptic plasticity is not the exclusive mode
of regulation of information processing in the brain, and persistent
regulations of ionic conductances in some specialized neuronal areas such as
the dendrites, the cell body, and the axon could also modulate, in the
long-term, the propagation of neuronal information. Persistent changes in
intrinsic excitability have been reported in several brain areas in which
activity is elevated during a classical conditioning. The role of synaptic
activity seems to be a determinant in the induction, but the learning rules
and the underlying mechanisms remain to be defined. We discuss here the role
of synaptic activity in the induction of intrinsic plasticity in cortical,
hippocampal, and cerebellar neurons. Activation of glutamate receptors
initiates a long-term modification in neuronal excitability that may represent
a parallel, synergistic substrate for learning and memory. Similar to synaptic
plasticity, long-lasting intrinsic plasticity appears to be bidirectional and
to express a certain level of input or cell specificity. These nonsynaptic
forms of plasticity affect the signal propagation in the axon, the dendrites,
and the soma. They not only share common learning rules and induction pathways
with the better-known synaptic plasticity such as NMDA receptor dependent LTP
and LTD, but also contribute in synergy with these synaptic changes to the
formation of a coherent engram.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
456 articles.
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