| Literature DB >> 23626536 |
Abstract
Short term plasticity is a highly abundant form of rapid, activity-dependent modulation of synaptic efficacy. A shared set of mechanisms can cause both depression and enhancement of the postsynaptic response at different synapses, with important consequences for information processing. Mathematical models have been extensively used to study the mechanisms and roles of short term plasticity. This review provides an overview of existing models and their biological basis, and of their main properties. Special attention will be given to slow processes such as calcium channel inactivation and the effect of activation of presynaptic autoreceptors.Entities:
Keywords: mathematical model; short term plasticity; synaptic depression; synaptic facilitation; synaptic transmission
Year: 2013 PMID: 23626536 PMCID: PMC3630333 DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2013.00045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Comput Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5188 Impact factor: 2.380
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the main steps involved in synaptic transmission, and of variables subject to use-dependent modification. Symbols refer to quantities used in the model equations in this review.
Figure 2Summary of the key characteristics of the models discussed in this review. (A–D) Postsynaptic response for the different models during stimulation at different frequencies. (A) The vesicle depletion model (Equation 3) predicts exponential decay of the response and an inverse relation between stimulus frequency and steady-state amplitude. A higher release probability causes faster and stronger depression [compare upper and lower graph, see also panel (E)]. (B) The depletion model with facilitation (Equations 3, 4) predict a transient response increase during high-frequency stimulation. For a low basal release probability p0 the response remains elevated (top graph), while for higher p0 vesicle depletion masks facilitation [bottom graph, see also panel (E)]. (C) Use-dependent vesicle replenishment (Equation 6) increases the steady-state response. (D) As panel (C), but with added slow use-dependent suppression of release probability. Here the postsynaptic response continues to slowly decay when the depletion model reaches steady-state [compare (C) and (D)]. (E) Steady-state response magnitude as a function of input frequency for the depletion model (circles) and the depletion model with facilitation (dashed lines). (F) Same as (E), but for the depletion model with use-dependent replenishment (UDE, circles) and the UDE model with slow suppression of release probability (RS, dashed). Note that the latter increases depression in particular at low frequencies. (G) Occupancy of the releasable vesicle pool for the models in panel (F). It is less depleted for the RS model as steady-state depression is mediated by the reduction in release probability. Parameters: τ = 1 s, a = 0.3, τ = 0.2 s [no facilitation in (C,D)], a = 0.4, τ = 0.1 s, a = 0.01, τ = 10 s.