REMODELING OF FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY AT GRANULE CELL–PURKINJE CELL SYNAPSES IN THE MOUSE CEREBELLUM
University of Strasbourg
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS03-08AM-527
Poster
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Using patterned light photostimulation combined with patch-clamp recordings in acute cerebellar slices, we showed that PC are connected to clusters of GCs of different modules, while most remain silent, thus forming a specific connectivity map (CoMap). CoMaps are conserved across mice in lobules III, IV and V of the cerebellar cortex, but they reorganize when the locomotor context changes. We set out to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying CoMap reorganization. Using electrical stimulation paired with patch-clamp recordings in acute slices, we identified a high-frequency stimulation protocol, known to induce LTP at GC-PC synapses, that awakens 50% of previously silent synapses. Moreover, blocking mGluR1 receptors or using Cav3.1 knockout mice, both essential for LTP, also completely blocks the awakening of these synapses.
These findings demonstrate that mGluR1- and Cav3.1-dependent plasticity recruits previously silent GC–PC synapses, dynamically reshaping CoMap between cerebellar modules and thereby modulating intermodular information processing for motor adaptation.
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