• Sign up
  • ‎What is Shvoong?‎
  • Sign In
    Sign In
    Remember my username Forgot your password?

Summaries and Short Reviews

.

Shvoong Home>Science>Biology>Nitric Oxide Regulates Input Specificity of Long-Term Depression and Context Dependence of Cerebella Summary

.

Nitric Oxide Regulates Input Specificity of Long-Term Depression and Context Dependence of Cerebella

Book Abstract by: PLoS    

Original Authors: Ogasawara Hideaki; Doi Tomokazu; Doya Kenji; Kawato Mitsuo
Recent studies have shown that multiple internal models are acquired in the cerebellum and that these can be switched under
a given context of behavior. It has been proposed that long-term depression (LTD) of parallel fiber (PF)Purkinje cell (PC) synapses forms the cellular basis of cerebellar learning, and that the presynaptically synthesized messenger nitric oxide (NO) is a crucial gatekeeper for LTD. Because NO diffuses freely to neighboring synapses, this volume learning is not input-specific and brings into question the biological significance of LTD as the basic mechanism for efficient supervised learning. To better characterize the role of NO in cerebellar learning, we simulated the sequence of electrophysiological and biochemical events in PFPC LTD by combining established simulation models of the electrophysiology, calcium dynamics, and signaling pathways of the PC. The results demonstrate that the local NO concentration is critical for induction of LTD and for its input specificity. Pre- and postsynaptic coincident firing is not sufficient for a PFPC synapse to undergo LTD, and LTD is induced only when a sufficient amount of NO is provided by activation of the surrounding PFs. On the other hand, above-adequate levels of activity in nearby PFs cause accumulation of NO, which also allows LTD in neighboring synapses that were not directly stimulated, ruining input specificity. These findings lead us to propose the hypothesis that NO represents the relevance of a given context and enables context-dependent selection of internal models to be updated. We also predict sparse PF activity in vivo because, otherwise, input specificity would be lost.
Published: January 12, 2007
Please Rate this Review : 1 2 3 4 5

Bookmark & share this post

.