Postsynaptic burst reactivation of hippocampal neurons enables associative plasticity of temporally discontiguous inputs

Author:

Fuchsberger Tanja1ORCID,Clopath Claudia2ORCID,Jarzebowski Przemyslaw1,Brzosko Zuzanna1,Wang Hongbing3,Paulsen Ole1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, Physiological Laboratory, University of Cambridge

2. Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London

3. Department of Physiology, Michigan State University

Abstract

A fundamental unresolved problem in neuroscience is how the brain associates in memory events that are separated in time. Here, we propose that reactivation-induced synaptic plasticity can solve this problem. Previously, we reported that the reinforcement signal dopamine converts hippocampal spike timing-dependent depression into potentiation during continued synaptic activity (Brzosko et al., 2015). Here, we report that postsynaptic bursts in the presence of dopamine produce input-specific LTP in mouse hippocampal synapses 10 min after they were primed with coincident pre- and post-synaptic activity (post-before-pre pairing; Δt = –20 ms). This priming activity induces synaptic depression and sets an NMDA receptor-dependent silent eligibility trace which, through the cAMP-PKA cascade, is rapidly converted into protein synthesis-dependent synaptic potentiation, mediated by a signaling pathway distinct from that of conventional LTP. This synaptic learning rule was incorporated into a computational model, and we found that it adds specificity to reinforcement learning by controlling memory allocation and enabling both ‘instructive’ and ‘supervised’ reinforcement learning. We predicted that this mechanism would make reactivated neurons activate more strongly and carry more spatial information than non-reactivated cells, which was confirmed in freely moving mice performing a reward-based navigation task.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

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

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