Accumulation of amyloid plaques comprises one of the major hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In rodents, acute treatment with amyloid-beta (Aft; 1-42) elicits immediate debilitating effects on hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). Whereas LTP contributes to synaptic information storage, information is transferred across neurons by means of neuronal oscillations. Furthermore, changes in theta-gamma oscillations, that appear during high-frequency stimulation (HFS) to induce LTP, predict whether successful LTP will occur. Here, we explored if intra-cerebral treatment with Aft(1-42), that prevents LTP, also results in alterations of hippocampal oscillations that occur during HFS of the perforant path-dentate gyrus synapse in 6-month-old behaving rats. HFS resulted in LTP that lasted for over 24 h. In Aft-treated animals, LTP was significantly prevented. During HFS, spectral power for oscillations below 100 Hz (S, 0, a, ft and y) was significantly higher in Aft-treated animals compared to controls. In addition, the trough-to-peak amplitudes of theta and gamma cycles were higher during HFS in Aft-treated animals. We also observed a lower amount of envelope-to-signal correlations during HFS in Aft-treated animals. Overall, the characteristic profile of theta-gamma oscillations that accompany successful LTP induction was disrupted. These data indicate that alterations in network oscillations accompany Aft-effects on hippocampal LTP. This may comprise an underlying mechanism through which disturbances in synaptic information storage and hippocampus-dependent memory occurs in AD.
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Kalweit, A. N., Yang, H., Colitti-Klausnitzer, J., Fulóp, L., Bozsó, Z., Penke, B., & Manahan-Vaughan, D. (2015). Acute intracerebral treatment with amyloid-beta (1-42) alters the profile of neuronal oscillations that accompany LTP induction and results in impaired LTP in freely behaving rats. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 9(MAY). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00103