Abstract
LTP, a fundamental mechanism of learning and memory, is a highly regulated process. One form of regulation is metaplasticity (i.e., the activity-dependent and long-lasting changes in neuronal state that orchestrate the direction, magnitude, and persistence of future synaptic plasticity). We have previously described a heterodendritic metaplasticity effect, whereby strong high-frequency priming stimulation in stratum oriens inhibits subsequent LTP in the stratum radiatum of hippocampal area CA1, potentially by engagement of the enmeshed astrocytic network. This effect may occur due to neuron-glia interactions in response to priming stimulation that leads to the release of gliotransmitters. Here we found in male rats that TNF and associated signal transduction enzymes, but not interleukin-1α (IL-1α), were responsiblefor mediatingthe metaplasticity effect. Replacing priming stimulation with TNFincubation reproducedthese effects. As TNF levels are elevated in Alzheimer's disease, we examined whether heterodendritic metaplasticity is dysregulated in a transgenic mouse model of the disease, either before or after amyloid plaque formation. We showed that TNF and IL-1α levels were significantly increased in aged but not young transgenic mice. Although control LTP was impaired in the young transgenic mice, it was not TNF-dependent. In the older transgenic mice, however, LTP was impaired in a way that occluded further reduction by heterosyn aptic metaplasticity, whereas LTP was entirely rescued by incubation with a TNF antibody, but not an IL-1α antibody. Thus, TNF mediates a heterodendritic metaplasticity in healthy rodents that becomes constitutively and selectively engaged in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.
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Singh, A., Jones, O. D., Mockett, B. G., Ohline, S. M., & Abraham, W. C. (2019). Tumor necrosis factor-α-mediated metaplastic inhibition of ltp is constitutively engaged in an alzheimer’s disease model. Journal of Neuroscience, 39(46), 9083–9097. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1492-19.2019
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