Author:
Remondes Miguel,Schuman Erin M.
Abstract
The hippocampus and the nearby medial temporal lobe structures are required
for the formation, consolidation, and retrieval of episodic memories. Sensory
information enters the hippocampus via two inputs from entorhinal cortex (EC):
One input (perforant path) makes synapses on the dendrites of dentate granule
cells as the first set of synapses in the trisynaptic circuit, the other
(temporoammonic; TA) makes synapses on the distal dendrites of CA1 neurons.
Here we demonstrate that TA–CA1 synapses undergo both early- and
late-phase long-term potentiation (LTP) in rat hippocampal slices. LTP at
TA–CA1 synapses requires both NMDA receptor and voltage-gated
Ca2+ channel activity. Furthermore, TA–CA1 LTP is insensitive
to the blockade of fast inhibitory transmission (GABAA-mediated)
and, interestingly, is dependent on GABAB-dependent slow inhibitory
transmission. These findings indicate that the TA–CA1 synapses may rely
on a refined modulation of inhibition to exhibit LTP.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
70 articles.
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