What did Donald Hebb propose?
That memories start in SYNAPSES:
Where was Hebb’s hypothesis tested?
Why?
In the hippocampus
The hippocampus is involved in memory
What 2 things can change the hippocampus?
- Neurodegenerative diseases attack the hippocampus early
What is the simplified circuit of the hippocampus?
What are CA3 cells aka?
Mossy fibres
What are the connections between CA3 and CA3 aka?
Schaffer collaterals
Which synapase is used to study the mechanisms of LTD and LTP?
The synapse between CA3 and CA1 neurons in the HIPPOCAMPUS
What happens when the CA3 is electrically stimulated?
There is production of an EPSP in CA1
What happens when the CA3 is electrically stimulated with HIGH FREQUENCY stimulation?
What is this called?
There is an increase in the amplitude of EPSPs
This is called long-term potentiation (LTP)
What properties does LTP show?
1) Input specificity
2) Co-operativity (co-incidence) which doesn’t require high frequency stimulation
How does LTP show input specificity?
What does this also show?
Neuron with 2 inputs from different neurons will only increase in EPSP amplitude in synapse 1 if ONLY stimulate synapse 1 with HFS
Synapse 2 is unaffected
Shows the mechanism of LTP to be confined to the synapses and NOT the cell bodies
How does LTP show co-incidence without HFS?
What does the mechanism of co-incidence without HFS suggest?
A mechanism of associative learning:
What are the 2 different ideas about how LTP could occur?
Which one has more evidence?
1) By pre-synaptic changes (proteins change number or properties)
2) By a postsynaptic event
- -> More evidence!!
What substance is important in triggering LTP?
How?
Ca2+:
Ca2+ though NDMA receptors is activated by the binding of GLUTAMATE, which is released from the presynaptic membrane
What occurs in the NDMA receptors when the cell is hyperpolarised?
Mg2+ block in the pore of the channel
What happens when the NDMA receptors are activated with glutamate, when they are blocked with Mg2+?
The channels don’t open much
How is the Mg2+ block removed from the NDMA receptor?
How does this trigger LTP?
When activating the NDMA receptor with glutamate AT THE SAME TIME AS depolarising the membrane
Triggers LTP as as Ca2+ can enter through the NDMA receptor
Ca2+ is the key trigger of LTP (by increasing the number of AMPA receptors in the presynaptic membrane)
How does subsequent depolarisation of both the pre- and post synaptic neuron cause simultaneous activation?
Causes release of glutamate from the presynaptic neuron
AND
Removal of the Mg2+ block from the postsynaptic neuron due depolarisation
How does high frequency stimulation cause LTP?
What are the differences between EARLY and LATE LTP?
Early:
Late:
How does Ca2+ mediated entry induce early phase LTP?
Activates calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII), which phosphorylates other proteins, leading to enhances AMPA currents
Where is CaMKII present?
In the post synaptic density
What is the structure of CaMKII?
2 different subunits - regulatory and catalytic