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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 4 April 2001, pp. 1377-1383
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Pharmacology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky 40536-6209; and 2Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-5020
Foster, T. C. and
T. C. Dumas.
Mechanism for Increased Hippocampal Synaptic Strength Following
Differential Experience. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1377-1383, 2001. Exposure to novel environments or
behavioral training is associated with increased strength at
hippocampal synapses. The present study employed quantal analysis
techniques to examine the mechanism supporting changes in synaptic
transmission that occur following differential behavioral experience.
Measures of CA1 synaptic strength were obtained from hippocampal slices
of rats exposed to novel environments or maintained in individual
cages. The input/output (I/O) curve of extracellularly recorded
population excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) increased for
animals exposed to enrichment. The amplitude of the synaptic response
of the field potential was related to the fiber potential amplitude and
the paired-pulse ratio, however, these measures were not altered by differential experience. Estimates of biophysical parameters of transmission were determined for intracellularly recorded unitary responses of CA1 pyramidal cells. Enrichment was associated with an
increase in the mean unitary synaptic response, an increase in quantal
size, and a trend for decreased input resistance and reduction in the
stimulation threshold to elicit a unitary response. Paired-pulse
facilitation, the percent of response failures, coefficient of
variance, and estimates of quantal content were not altered by
experience but correlated well with the mean unitary response amplitude. The results suggest that baseline synaptic strength is
determined, to a large extent, by presynaptic release mechanisms. However, increased synaptic transmission following environmental enrichment is likely due to an increase in the number or efficacy of
receptors at some synapses and the emergence of functional synaptic
contacts between previously unconnected CA3 and CA1 cells.
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