scholarly journals The rich get richer: synaptic remodeling between climbing fibers and Purkinje cells in the developing cerebellum begins with positive feedback addition of synapses

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyssa Michelle Wilson ◽  
Richard Schalek ◽  
Adi Suissa-Peleg ◽  
Thouis Ray Jones ◽  
Seymour Knowles-Barley ◽  
...  

SUMMARYDuring postnatal development, cerebellar climbing fibers strongly innervate a subset of their original Purkinje cell targets and eliminate their connections from the rest. In the adult, each climbing fiber innervates a small number of Purkinje cells and each Purkinje cell is innervated by a single climbing fiber. To get insight about the processes responsible for this remapping, we reconstructed serial electron microscopy datasets from mice during the first postnatal week. In contrast to adult connectivity, individual neonatal climbing fibers innervate many nearby Purkinje cells, and multiple climbing fibers innervate each Purkinje cell. Between postnatal days 3 and 7, Purkinje cells retract long dendrites and grow many proximal dendritic processes. On this changing landscape, individual climbing fibers selectively add many synapses to a subset of Purkinje cell targets in a positive-feedback manner, without pruning synapses from other Purkinje cells. The active zone sizes of synapses associated with powerful versus weak inputs are indistinguishable. These results show that changes in synapse number rather than synapse size are the predominant form of early developmental plasticity. Finally, although multiple climbing fibers innervate each Purkinje cell in early postnatal development, the number of climbing fibers and Purkinje cells in a local cerebellar region nearly match. Thus, initial over-innervation of Purkinje cells by climbing fibers is economical, in that the number of axons entering a region is enough to assure that each axon ends up with a postsynaptic target, and that none branched there in vain.HIGHLIGHTSDeveloping climbing fibers establish synapses on many neighboring Purkinje cells unlike the sparse pattern of innervation in later lifeClimbing fibers add many synapses onto a few of their Purkinje targets before the pruning stage in a rich-get-richer type processThe synapse sizes of strengthened and weakened climbing fiber inputs are indistinguishable.Exuberant branching of climbing fiber axons in early postnatal life appears to be economical because the numbers of axons and Purkinje cells in a local region match, ensuring that each axon can establish a long-lasting connection thereBLURBHigh-resolution serial electron microscopy reconstructions reveal that climbing fiber-Purkinje cell synaptic refinement in the developing cerebellum begins with significant synapse addition. Climbing fibers focus their synapses onto a smaller number of Purkinje cells by selectively adding synapses onto some target cells. All axons that project to a region in development play a role in the final connectivity.

2010 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. e37-e38
Author(s):  
Kouichi Hashimoto ◽  
Mika Tsujita ◽  
Kazuo Kitamura ◽  
Taisuke Miyazaki ◽  
Maya Yamazaki ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 2555-2563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bibiana Scelfo ◽  
Piergiorgio Strata ◽  
Thomas Knöpfel

Maturation of specific neuronal connections in the mature nervous system includes elimination of redundant synapses formed earlier during development. In the cerebellum of adult animals, each Purkinje cell (PC) is innervated by a single climbing fiber (CF). In early postnatal development each PC is innervated by multiple CFs and elimination of synapses formed by supernumerary CFs occurs until monoinnervation is established at around postnatal day 20 (P20) in mice. It is not clear whether multiple CFs, or only a single CF, translocate from the cell body of immature PCs to the developing dendrite and, in case several CFs translocate, whether they share or segregate their innervation fields. To localize CF innervation fields, we imaged changes in postsynaptic sodium concentration resulting from CF-mediated postsynaptic currents. We found that more than one CF translocates from an innervation field on the cell body of the PC to the developing dendrite and that these CFs share rather than segregate their innervation fields. We concluded that both the soma and the proximal dendrite of the PC are territories of competition for the developing CFs and that the overlapping of their termination fields may be the prerequisite for a local process of elimination of all but one CF, as previously demonstrated in the developing neuromuscular junction.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Voogd

AbstractGerbrandus Jelgersma published extensively on the (pathological) anatomy of the cerebellum between 1886 and 1934. Based on his observations on the double innervation of the Purkinje cells, he formulated a hypothesis on the function of the cerebellum. Both afferent systems of the cerebellum, the mossy fiber-parallel fiber system and the climbing fibers terminate on the Purkinje cell dendrites. According to Jelgersma, the mossy fiber-parallel fiber system is derived from the pontine nuclei and the inferior olive, and would transmit the movement images derived from the cerebral cortex. Spinocerebellar climbing fibers would transmit information about the execution of the movement. When the Purkinje cell compares these inputs and notices a difference between instruction and execution, it sends a correction through the descending limb of the superior cerebellar peduncle to the anterior horn cells. Jelgersma postulates that this cerebro-cerebellar coordination system shares plasticity with other nervous connections because nerve cell dendritic protrusions possess what he called amoeboid mobility: dendritic protrusions can be extended or retracted and are so able to create new connections or to abolish them. Jelgersma’s theories are discussed against the background of more recent theories of cerebellar function that, similarly, are based on the double innervation of the Purkinje cells. The amoeboid hypothesis is traced to its roots in the late nineteenth century.


eLife ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farzaneh Najafi ◽  
Andrea Giovannucci ◽  
Samuel S-H Wang ◽  
Javier F Medina

The climbing fiber input to Purkinje cells acts as a teaching signal by triggering a massive influx of dendritic calcium that marks the occurrence of instructive stimuli during cerebellar learning. Here, we challenge the view that these calcium spikes are all-or-none and only signal whether the instructive stimulus has occurred, without providing parametric information about its features. We imaged ensembles of Purkinje cell dendrites in awake mice and measured their calcium responses to periocular airpuffs that serve as instructive stimuli during cerebellar-dependent eyeblink conditioning. Information about airpuff duration and pressure was encoded probabilistically across repeated trials, and in two additional signals in single trials: the synchrony of calcium spikes in the Purkinje cell population, and the amplitude of the calcium spikes, which was modulated by a non-climbing fiber pathway. These results indicate that calcium-based teaching signals in Purkinje cells contain analog information that encodes the strength of instructive stimuli trial-by-trial.


2007 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 2590-2604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce E. McKay ◽  
Jordan D. T. Engbers ◽  
W. Hamish Mehaffey ◽  
Grant R. J. Gordon ◽  
Michael L. Molineux ◽  
...  

The contribution of Purkinje cells to cerebellar motor coordination and learning is determined in part by the chronic and acute effects of climbing fiber (CF) afferents. Whereas the chronic effects of CF discharge, such as the depression of conjunctive parallel fiber (PF) inputs, are well established, the acute cellular functions of CF discharge remain incompletely understood. In rat cerebellar slices, we show that CF discharge presented at physiological frequencies substantially modifies the frequency and pattern of Purkinje cell spike output in vitro. Repetitive CF discharge converts a spontaneous trimodal pattern of output characteristic of Purkinje cells in vitro to a more naturalistic nonbursting pattern consisting of spike trains interrupted by short CF-evoked pauses or longer pauses associated with state transitions. All effects of CF discharge could be reproduced in the presence of synaptic blockers by using current injections to simulate complex spike depolarizations, revealing that CF-evoked changes in Purkinje cell output can occur independently of network activation. Rather postsynaptic changes are sufficient to account for the CF-evoked block of trimodal activity and include at least the activation of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels. Furthermore by controlling the frequency of Purkinje cell spike output over three discrete firing levels, CF discharge modulates the gain of Purkinje cell responsiveness to PF inputs in vitro through postsynaptic mechanisms triggered by the complex spike depolarization. The ability for CF discharge to acutely modulate diverse aspects of Purkinje cell output provides important insights into the probable cellular factors contributing to motor disturbances following CF denervation.


1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 3083-3094 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Fushiki ◽  
N. H. Barmack

Fushiki, H. and N. H. Barmack. Topography and reciprocal activity of cerebellar Purkinje cells in the uvula-nodulus modulated by vestibular stimulation. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 3083–3094, 1997. In the rabbit uvula-nodulus, vestibular and optokinetic information is mapped onto parasagittal zones by climbing fibers. These zones are related functionally to different pairs of vertical semicircular canals, otolithic inputs and horizontal optokinetic inputs. Vestibular stimulation restricted to one of these zones modulates climbing fiber responses (CFRs). Within each of these zones, simple spikes (SSs) are modulated reciprocally with CFRs. In rabbits anesthetized with chloralose-urethan, we have used vestibular and optokinetic stimulation to evoke CFRs within a parasagittal zone while recording from Purkinje cells in adjacent zones. We have examined whether the CFRs evoked by vestibular stimulation in one zone influence the SSs of an adjacent zone. CFRs and SSs were recorded during roll vestibular stimulation. The orientation of the head of the rabbit with respect to the axis of rotation was varied systematically so that a climbing fiber null plane could be determined. This null plane was the orientation of the head about the vertical axis at which no modulation of the CFR was observed during rotation about the longitudinal axis of the vestibular rate table. In the left uvula-nodulus, a medial sagittal strip extending through all the folia contained Purkinje cells with CFRs that had optimal planes of stimulation coplanar with the left posterior-right anterior semicircular canals (LPC-RAC). Lateral to this strip was a strip of Purkinje cells with CFRs that were characterized by optimal planes corresponding to stimulation of the left anterior-right posterior semicircular canals (LAC-RPC). SSs in Purkinje cells were modulated out of phase with CFRs from the same Purkinje cell. The depth of modulation of both CFRs and SSs was reduced during rotation in the climbing fiber “null plane”. The depth of modulation of SSs was greatest when recorded from Purkinje cells located at the center of semicircular canal-related strip. We observed that 1) all folia of the uvula-nodulus receive vestibular climbing fiber inputs; 2) these climbing fiber inputs convey information from the vertical semicircular canals and otoliths but not the horizontal semicircular canals; 3) CFRs evoked in a particular sagittal zone do not influence SSs in adjacent zones; 4) modulation of a CFRs in a particular Purkinje cell can occur without modulation of SSs in the same Purkinje cell, although modulation of SSs was not observed in the absence of CFR modulation; and 5) modulation of SSs sometimes preceded that of CFRs in the same cell, implying that interneuronal pathways may contribute to SS modulation. Climbing fiber-driven Golgi cells, the inhibitory axon terminals of which end on granule cell dendrites in the classic glomerular synapse, may provide this interneuronal mechanism.


2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonius Plagge ◽  
Luzie Sendtner-Voelderndorff ◽  
Pinar Sirim ◽  
Jörg Freigang ◽  
Christoph Rader ◽  
...  

Cell Reports ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 2849-2861.e6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyssa Michelle Wilson ◽  
Richard Schalek ◽  
Adi Suissa-Peleg ◽  
Thouis R. Jones ◽  
Seymour Knowles-Barley ◽  
...  

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