Dean NMR 6 Flashcards
What is the debate about drugs in this area?
Drugs enhancing memory would accumulate interest in regard to clinical conditions such as Alzheimer’s and also for everyday life e.g. exams
But should there be such a drug?
What about drugs for the cerebellum?
They could perhaps help with motor skills
What are the assumptions about conditioning in the cerebellum so far?
- During conditioning, the CS is paired with the US so that parallel fibre firing is paired with firing in the climbing fibres
- Theory predicts that the PF-PC synapses become less effective by a process termed LTD
- Assumed that the inhibitory pathway is unchanged
- Therefore, PCs receive a net inhibitory input when the CS comes on after conditioning
- The PCs pause thereby releasing firing in the AIPN
What did Medina and Mauk (2000) do?
They produced a computer simulation of cerebellar information processing
Is there evidence for LTD in the cerebellum?
Yes (Ito, 1984; 2002)
There is a huge amount of evidence
Mainly found in slices in vitro (in glass) which are very thin slices of neural tissue kept in a small dish of liquid and can be looked at using a microscope
Why is it good to use slices?
Using a hydraulic steel table for slices removes vibrations from foot steps, traffic etc. so you can keep recording from the cell for long periods - important for studying plasticity effects
Can control for artefacts
Any movement from the animal itself e.g. blood flow is eliminated
Can see what cell the electrode is recording from and control the chemical environment in the cell e.g. can block the plasticity
What are the typical results found from the slices?
Once stimulation of parallel fibres and climbing fibres is paired, and the stimulation of climbing fibres is stopped
Can see that the purkinje cell response has been reduced
What does LTD do?
Makes EPSPs smaller
What happens at the parallel fibre - purkinje cell synapse?
It uses glutamate as a neurotransmitter
Has 2 kinds of post synaptic receptor
1. ionotropic glutamate receptor
2. metabotropic glutamate receptor
Outline the ionotropic glutamate receptor
The familiar, conventional kind which was originally described 50-60 years ago
When it is activated by glutamate it opens to allow ions to flow into the cell - hence the name ionotropic
Give rise to EPSPs and APs if strong enough
What are ionotropic glutamate receptors called on purkinje cells?
AMPA receptors
Outline the metabotropic glutamate receptor
The less familiar kind which was discovered around 30 years ago
When activated by glutamate they act on signalling machinery inside the cell which alters the cell metabolism
What is an example of a metabotropic glutamate receptor in purkinje cells?
mGluR1 (metabotropic glutamate receptor type 1)
What is the possible mechanism of LTD?
- Parallel fibres firing activates both the AMPA and mGluR1 receptors
- mGluR1 activations start a cascade of processes in the cell
- If the climbing fibre also fires, this cascade continues until some AMPA receptors are removed
- Removal of AMPA receptors reduces amplitudes of EPSPs induced by parallel fibre stimulation e.g. LTD
cells are extremely complex factories
What is the first problem with slices?
Slices are ‘unnatural’ - they have no afferents, no blood supply.
So we cannot assume that the processes observed in slices are necessarily present in the intact brain