A unified computational model for cortical post-synaptic plasticity

Author:

Mäki-Marttunen Tuomo1ORCID,Iannella Nicolangelo2,Edwards Andrew G1,Einevoll Gaute T34ORCID,Blackwell Kim T5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Simula Research Laboratory, Oslo, Norway

2. Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

3. Faculty of Science and Technology, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Oslo, Norway

4. Department of Physics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

5. The Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study, George Mason University, Fairfax, United States

Abstract

Signalling pathways leading to post-synaptic plasticity have been examined in many types of experimental studies, but a unified picture on how multiple biochemical pathways collectively shape neocortical plasticity is missing. We built a biochemically detailed model of post-synaptic plasticity describing CaMKII, PKA, and PKC pathways and their contribution to synaptic potentiation or depression. We developed a statistical AMPA-receptor-tetramer model, which permits the estimation of the AMPA-receptor-mediated maximal synaptic conductance based on numbers of GluR1s and GluR2s predicted by the biochemical signalling model. We show that our model reproduces neuromodulator-gated spike-timing-dependent plasticity as observed in the visual cortex and can be fit to data from many cortical areas, uncovering the biochemical contributions of the pathways pinpointed by the underlying experimental studies. Our model explains the dependence of different forms of plasticity on the availability of different proteins and can be used for the study of mental disorder-associated impairments of cortical plasticity.

Funder

Research Council of Norway

Horizon 2020 - Research and Innovation Framework Programme

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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