Associative plasticity of AA and PF inputs

A, top. Whole cell recording in a PC. Two stimulation electrodes are used to activate GC inputs: one in the molecular layer to stimulate PFs (orange), and one in the GC layer to stimulate AAs (blue). Middle, AA- and PF-PSCs sampled with a pair of pulses (dt = 50 ms), every 10 s. Traces from one experiment: average AA-PSC (blue) and PF-PSC (orange), before (5-10 min, continuous line) and after the induction protocol (25-30 min, dotted line). Subtraction in grey. AA-EPSC amplitude increased while PF-EPSC amplitude decreased. No antagonist was applied. Evoked responses often consisted of mixed EPSC/IPSC. Bottom, induction protocol. Recording switched to current clamp, VH = −65 mV. AAs and PFs are stimulated synchronously by a train of 15 pulses at 100 Hz every 3 s for 5 min. Grey traces, responses to the first two trains of stimulation. B Top, plot of the average AA- and PF-EPSC amplitude normalised to baseline (5-10min, n = 25, colours and symbols as in A) for LTP and control No Stim experiments (continuous lines). Following induction, a long term change of opposite sign of the inputs was observed. The amplitude of the AA-EPSC increased to 131% ± 7 % (N = 24) of baseline 25-30 min after induction. The PF-EPSC on the other hand decreased slowly to 65% ±5 % (N = 25) of baseline. Continuous lines show the average time course of AA- and PF-EPSC amplitudes during control No Stim experiments where no stimulation was performed during the Iclamp period (N = 17, see supplementary Figure 1), showing the extent of EPSC rundown during the course of the recordings. Middle, the average ratio of the normalised amplitudes of AA- and PF-EPSCs (AA/PF), highlighting the relative change of the inputs (relative plasticity), doubles. Bottom, average normalised paired pulse ratio (AA2/AA1 and PF2/PF1) is transiently decreased following induction. C. Average of 8 experiments with stimulation of the AA pathway only during induction (labels, colours and symbols as in A), and No Stim experiments overlaid (continuous lines). Top, the normalised amplitudes of AA- and PF-EPSCs progressively decreased to 72 % ± 7% (N = 8) and 64 % ± 6% (N = 8) of baseline respectively at 25-30 minutes, not significantly different from No Stim experiments. Stimulation of the AA pathway alone is not sufficient to trigger AA-LTP. D. Average of 13 experiments with stimulation of the PF pathway only during induction (labels), and No Stim experiments overlaid (continuous lines). Top, the normalised AA-EPSCs showed a small and steady depression (84% ± 7 % of baseline after 25-30 min) whereas the PF-EPSC depressed over time (64% ± 6 %), not significantly different from No Stim experiments. Stimulation of the PF pathway on its own is not sufficient to trigger LTP or LTD. C and D bottom, the PPR of the AA and PF pathways transiently decreased only for the pathway stimulated during induction.

Time dependence of plasticity

The effect of the relative timing of stimulation of the AA and PF pathways on plasticity was tested by stimulating the AA input 150 ms after or 150 ms before the PF input. A. On average, when stimulating AAs 150 ms after PFs, the AA- and PF-EPSCs now decreased by a similar extent (AA was 53 % ± 15 %, PF 50 % ± 20 % of control, n = 8). The relative normalised amplitude of the AA pathway increased but not significantly (AA/PF was 224 % ± 75 % of control, n = 7). B. When stimulating AAs 150 ms before PFs, the AA-EPSC first facilitated, but declined back to baseline (AA was 97% ± 26% of control, n = 7), and the PF-EPSC was maintained close to baseline (PF 84 % ± 12 % of control, n= 7). The relative normalised amplitude of the AA pathway and the PPR were not affected significantly (AA/PF was 126 % ± 31% of control, and PPRAA = 114.4 % ± 6.4 %, PPRPF = 107.1 % ± 4.6%, N = 7). C. Average amplitude as a percentage of baseline at 25-30 min. The dotted line shows the value of EPSC amplitude at the end of No Stim experiments. The AA-EPSC was 131% ± 7% of baseline (N = 24) 25 to 30 min after induction when AA and PF stimulation was synchronous. It was 53% ± 15% (N = 8) when AA stimulation was delayed by 150 ms, and 97 % ± 26 % (N = 7) when PF stimulation was delayed by 150 ms. The PF-EPSC was 65 % ± 5 % of baseline (N = 25) when stimulation was synchronous, 50% ± 20% (N = 8) when AA stimulation was delayed by 150 ms, and 84 % ± 12 % (N = 7) when PF stimulation was delayed by 150 ms. (*** p ⩽ 0.001, * p ⩽ 0.05, ns: not significant).

Role of NMDARs and mGluRs

A. Bath application of CPCCOEt (50 µM), a selective blocker of mGluR1Rs, strongly inhibits LTP of AA-EPSCs. Sample recordings from one experiment. Traces are the average of the AA(blue) and PF (orange) synaptic responses, before (5-10 min, continuous line) and after induction (25-30 min, dotted line). Subtraction traces (25-30 min - 5-10min) in black. A decrease of the AA-EPSC is observed, and the PF-EPSC is decreased as in control experiments. B. Top: Average time course of the normalised AA- and PF-EPSCs (N = 8). mGluR1 receptor block impairs AA-LTP. Middle: a small sustained increase of the ratio of normalised amplitudes (AA/PF) is observed. Bottom: Plot of the normalised PPR of both inputs. mGluR1R block does not influence the transient decrease in PPR following induction. C. Average of 7 experiments in the presence of the NMDAR competitive antagonist APV (50 µM). Top: Average normalised AA- and PF-EPSC amplitudes as a function of time (colours and symbols as in A). Following induction in the presence of APV, both AA and PF pathways are depressed, showing that NMDAR activation is necessary for AA-LTP induction. Middle: The ratio of normalised amplitudes (AA/PF) is slightly increased, reflecting a slower depression of the AA inputs. Bottom: the transient decrease of the normalised PPRs is still observed.

GABAA receptor block affects long term plastic changes

A. Sample recordings from an experiment in the presence of the GABAAR antagonist SR (3 µM). Paired EPSCs evoked before and after induction, together with subtraction traces (black), are shown for the AA (blue) and PF (orange) pathways. The AA-EPSC is increased after induction and the PF-EPSC is strongly decreased in this experiment. B. Average normalised peak EPSC amplitudes of the first and second evoked responses for AA and PF for 9 experiments. The big errors in AA peak amplitude observed after induction are due to the large variability of the outcome of the protocol on this pathway (AA 117%± 24 % ; PF 56%± 10%, n = 9). The ratio of the normalised AA and PF amplitude shows the same variability, while the normalised PPR displays the same relative error and time course as control experiments.

Role of the sparse input distribution

A. To test the role of the sparse input distribution, a stimulation electrode was positioned in the GC layer, 100 to 180 µm from the recorded PC, stimulating only PF synapses sparsely distributed on the PC dendrites. The induction protocol was applied to the sparse PF pathway (PF-sparse), together with the dense PF pathway stimulated in the molecular layer (PF-dense). B. Example experiment. Traces show the PF-sparse and -dense EPSCs before and after induction, and subtractions (grey) to highlight changes. 25 to 30 minutes after induction, both the sparse and dense EPSCs are reduced. Bottom left, IClamp responses to the first two trains of stimulation. C. Average time course of the normalised EPSC amplitudes for 10 experiments. Both sparse and dense inputs (colours and symbols as in B, top) are reduced on average to 88 % ± 13% (significantly smaller than control AA, p = 0.0024, n= 10 PF-sparse and n= 24 AA control) and 54% ± 10 % of baseline (significantly smaller than control PF, p = 0.017, n= 10 PF-dense and n = 25 PF control) after 25-30 min respectively. When AA stimulation was replaced by sparse PF stimulation, the PF-sparse input was depressed over the following 30 minutes, similarly to the PF-dense input. With time, the dense PF input was more strongly depressed, and the ratio of normalised amplitudes (PF-sparse/PF-dense) increased to 182 % ± 24 % of control.