NMDA receptors with incomplete Mg 2+ block enable low-frequency transmission through the cerebellar cortex

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Abstract

The cerebellar cortex coordinates movements and maintains balance by modifying motor commands as a function of sensory-motor context, which is encoded by mossy fiber (MF) activity. MFs exhibit a wide range of activity, from brief precisely timed high-frequency bursts, which encode discrete variables such as whisker stimulation, to low-frequency sustained rate-coded modulation, which encodes continuous variables such as head velocity. While high-frequency MF inputs have been shown to activate granule cells (GCs) effectively, much less is known about sustainedlow-frequencysignalingthrough the GClayer, which is impeded by ahyperpolarizedrestingpotential and strong GABA A-mediated tonic inhibition of GCs. Here we have exploited the intrinsic MF network of unipolar brush cells to activate GCs with sustained low-frequency asynchronous MF inputs in rat cerebellar slices. We find that low-frequency MF input modulates the intrinsic firing of Purkinje cells, and that this signal transmission through the GC layer requires synaptic activation of Mg 2+-block-resistant NMDA receptors (NMDARs) that are likely to contain the GluN2C subunit. Slow NMDAR conductances sum temporally to contribute approximately half the MF-GC synaptic charge at hyperpolarized potentials. Simulations of synaptic integration in GCs show that the NMDAR and slow spillover-activated AMPA receptor (AMPAR) components depolarize GCs to a similar extent. Moreover, their combined depolarizing effect enables the fast quantal AMPAR component to trigger action potentials at low MF input frequencies. Our results suggest that the weak Mg 2+ block of GluN2C-containing NMDARs enables transmission of low-frequency MF signals through the input layer of the cerebellar cortex. © 2012 the authors.

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Schwartz, E. J., Rothman, J. S., Dugue, G. P., Diana, M., Rousseau, C., Angus Silver, R., & Dieudonne, S. (2012). NMDA receptors with incomplete Mg 2+ block enable low-frequency transmission through the cerebellar cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 32(20), 6878–6893. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5736-11.2012

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