| Literature DB >> 30283004 |
Fredrik Johansson1,2, Dan-Anders Jirenhed1,2, Anders Rasmussen1,2, Riccardo Zucca3, Germund Hesslow4,5.
Abstract
Long-term depression (LTD) of parallel fibre/Purkinje cell synapses has been the favoured explanation for cerebellar motor learning such as classical eyeblink conditioning. Previous evidence against this interpretation has been contested. Here we wanted to test whether a classical conditioning protocol causes LTD. We applied a conditioning protocol, using a train of electrical pulses to the parallel fibres as the conditional stimulus. In order to rule out indirect effects caused by antidromic granule cell activation or output from Purkinje cells that might produce changes in Purkinje cell responsiveness, we focused the analysis on the first pulse in the conditional stimulus, that is, before any indirect effects would have time to occur. Purkinje cells learned to respond with a firing pause to the conditional stimulus. Yet, there was no depression of parallel fibre excitation after training.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30283004 PMCID: PMC6170427 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32791-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental paradigm. (A) Sites of climbing fiber (cf US) and parallel fiber (pf CS) stimulation and Purkinje cell recording (Pc recording). IO, inferior olive; Grc, granule cell; SC, superior colliculus. (B) Blink-controlling area in cerebellar cortex. IC, inferior colliculus; Roman numerals indicate cerebellar lobules. Below is a single-cell recording of two complex spikes, indicated by asterisks, elicited by periocular stimulation (1 pulse, 1 mA). The arrow indicates the time of stimulation. (C) Typical examples of naïve and conditioned Purkinje cell responses to a forelimb conditional stimulus. Activity seen during the US period is stimulation artefacts. (D) Simple spikes, indicated by asterisks, elicited by pf stimulation (arrows).
Figure 2Effects of conditioning on Purkinje cell responses to parallel fibre input. (A) Conditioned responses on CS only trials after training with either a 150 ms interstimulus interval (blue, n = 7, CS duration: 300 ms) or a 200 ms interstimulus interval (red, n = 5, CS duration: 800 ms). Traces show smoothed and averaged simple spike activity over 20 trials ± SEM as a percentage of background activity. ISI, interstimulus interval (between onset of the first CS pulse and the expected US). See ref.[8] for full details on these conditioned responses. (B) Sample records of a Purkinje cell’s response to the CS alone before and after learning. Arrows indicate the timing of CS pulses. The red arrows indicate those pulses that were selected for analysis. (C) Post stimulus time histograms showing spike probability in three sample cells. These cases illustrate the variability between cells. (D) Boxplot showing the average change (Δ prob) in spike probability in all cells for the three selected stimulus impulses (median, 75th and 25th percentiles, maximum and minimum data points not considered outliers and one outlier, defined as 1.5 quartile ranges below the first quartile, marked as ‘+’). P values indicate Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank tests mentioned in text.