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Glia, the helper cells of the brain, are essential in maintaining neural resilience across time and varying challenges: By reacting to changes in neuronal health glia carefully balance repair or disposal of injured neurons. Malfunction of these interactions is implicated in many neurodegenerative diseases. We present a reductionist model that mimics repair-or-dispose decisions to generate a hypothesis for the cause of disease onset. The model assumes four tissue states: healthy and challenged tissue, primed tissue at risk of acute damage propagation, and chronic neurodegeneration. We discuss analogies to progression stages observed in the most common neurodegenerative conditions and to experimental observations of cellular signaling pathways of glia-neuron crosstalk. The model suggests that the onset of neurodegeneration can result as a compromise between two conflicting goals: short-term resilience to stressors versus long-term prevention of tissue damage.
The intensity and the features of sensory stimuli are encoded in the activity of neurons in the cortex. In the visual and piriform cortices, the stimulus intensity rescales the activity of the population without changing its selectivity for the stimulus features. The cortical representation of the stimulus is therefore intensity invariant. This emergence of network-invariant representations appears robust to local changes in synaptic strength induced by synaptic plasticity, even though (i) synaptic plasticity can potentiate or depress connections between neurons in a feature-dependent manner, and (ii) in networks with balanced excitation and inhibition, synaptic plasticity determines the nonlinear network behavior. In this study we investigate the consistency of invariant representations with a variety of synaptic states in balanced networks. By using mean-field models and spiking network simulations, we show how the synaptic state controls the emergence of intensity-invariant or intensity-dependent selectivity. In particular, we demonstrate that an effective power-law synaptic transformation at the population level is necessary for invariance. In a range of firing rates, purely depressing short-term synapses fulfills this condition, and in this case, the network is contrast-invariant. Instead, facilitating short-term plasticity generally narrows the network selectivity. We found that facilitating and depressing short-term plasticity can be combined to approximate a power-law that leads to contrast invariance. These results explain how the physiology of individual synapses is linked to the emergence of invariant representations of sensory stimuli at the network level.
The prevalence and specificity of local protein synthesis during neuronal synaptic plasticity
(2021)
To supply proteins to their vast volume, neurons localize mRNAs and ribosomes in dendrites and axons. While local protein synthesis is required for synaptic plasticity, the abundance and distribution of ribosomes and nascent proteins near synapses remain elusive. Here, we quantified the occurrence of local translation and visualized the range of synapses supplied by nascent proteins during basal and plastic conditions. We detected dendritic ribosomes and nascent proteins at single-molecule resolution using DNA-PAINT and metabolic labeling. Both ribosomes and nascent proteins positively correlated with synapse density. Ribosomes were detected at ~85% of synapses with ~2 translational sites per synapse; ~50% of the nascent protein was detected near synapses. The amount of locally synthesized protein detected at a synapse correlated with its spontaneous Ca2+ activity. A multifold increase in synaptic nascent protein was evident following both local and global plasticity at respective scales, albeit with substantial heterogeneity between neighboring synapses.