| Literature DB >> 28676753 |
Abstract
Formation of new synapses between neurons is an essential mechanism for learning and encoding memories. The vast majority of excitatory synapses occur on dendritic spines, therefore, the growth dynamics of spines is strongly related to the plasticity timescales. Especially in the early stages of the developing brain, there is an abundant number of long, thin and motile protrusions (i.e., filopodia), which develop in timescales of seconds and minutes. Because of their unique morphology and motility, it has been suggested that filopodia can have a dual role in both spinogenesis and environmental sampling of potential axonal partners. I propose that filopodia can lower the threshold and reduce the time to form new dendritic spines and synapses, providing a substrate for fast learning. Based on this proposition, the functional role of filopodia during brain development is discussed in relation to learning and memory. Specifically, it is hypothesized that the postnatal brain starts with a single-stage memory system with filopodia playing a significant role in rapid structural plasticity along with the stability provided by the mushroom-shaped spines. Following the maturation of the hippocampus, this highly-plastic unitary system transitions to a two-stage memory system, which consists of a plastic temporary store and a long-term stable store. In alignment with these architectural changes, it is posited that after brain maturation, filopodia-based structural plasticity will be preserved in specific areas, which are involved in fast learning (e.g., hippocampus in relation to episodic memory). These propositions aim to introduce a unifying framework for a diversity of phenomena in the brain such as synaptogenesis, pruning and memory consolidation.Entities:
Keywords: dendritic spines; fast learning; filopodia; memory; plasticity; pruning; spine growth; synaptogenesis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28676753 PMCID: PMC5476769 DOI: 10.3389/fnsyn.2017.00012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Synaptic Neurosci ISSN: 1663-3563
Figure 1Illustration of filopodia and spine morphologies on a dendritic branch with axonal boutons nearby. Filopodia are motile long, needle like protrusions which grow and retract within minutes. When a filopodium makes a synaptic contact, its morphology may evolve from “thin spine” to “mushroom” shape, indicating maturation.
Figure 2Illustration of two possible routes for excitatory synapse formation between an axon and a dendrite which belong to two parent neurons. Route 1 shows the activity dependent de novo spine growth. In route 2, a pre-existing filopodium evolves into a stable spine in response to neuronal activity.
Figure 3Typical stages in the growth of new dendritic spine. Depending on the persistence of the activity, the growth process may result in a new synaptic connection or failure to form one.
Figure 4Lifetime trajectory of dendritic spine density and the developmental stages in the brain. Significant changes occur as synaptogenesis saturates which also coincides with the hippocampus maturation. Arrows indicate continuing processes throughout lifetime, such as synaptogenesis, but at much lower rates. On top, the hypothesis of single-stage to two-stage memory system transition is indicated.
Summary of time-dependent studies of filopodia mentioned in the text, ordered chronologically by publication date.
| Reference | Subject | Method | Age | Location | Imaging | Filopodia dynamics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dailey and Smith ( | rat | 2–7 days old | hippocampus (CA1–CA3) | time-lapse microscopy (0.5, 1 and 5 min intervals) | ~2.5 μm/min extension rate (median lifetime 10 min) | |
| Ziv and Smith ( | rat | 3–4 days old initially | hippocampus (CA1–CA3) | time-lapse microscopy (3 min resolution) | mean lifetime 9.5 min | |
| Xu et al. ( | mouse | 1–5 month old | motor cortex | two-photon microscopy (data taken on days 1, 2, 4, 8, 16) | majority of filopodia turn-over within 1 day | |
| Grutzendler et al. ( | mouse | 1 month old and adult (4–5 month) | visual cortex (layer 5) | two-photon microscopy (hourly measurements) | “‥majority extended or retracted during the 4 h period” ~100% turnover within 3 days | |
| Roelandse et al. ( | mouse | young (3 week old) and young adult (5 week old) | hippocampus (CA1) | time-lapse microscopy (10 s resolution) | growth and retraction within 1 min (videos show dramatic changes every 10 s) | |
| Zuo et al. ( | mouse | 1 month old and adult (4–5 month) | cortex (barrel, motor, prefrontal) | two-photon microscopy (hourly measurements) | ~20% of filopodia turnover within 1 h | |
| Toni et al. ( | mouse | adult | hippocampus (DG) | time-lapse microscopy (30 min intervals) | new growth and retraction of filopodia within 30 min | |
| Lohmann and Bonhoeffer ( | mouse and rat | postnatal 0–2 days | hippocampus (CA3) | time-lapse microscopy (3.9 Hz acquisition frequency) | filopodia growth (axon contact) <1 min (functional synapse establishment 30–120 min) |
Table highlights the diversity of subjects, age and location as well as the experimental techniques.