iScience (Oct 2018)

Homeostatic Plasticity Scales Dendritic Spine Volumes and Changes the Threshold and Specificity of Hebbian Plasticity

  • Anna Felicity Hobbiss,
  • Yazmin Ramiro-Cortés,
  • Inbal Israely

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 161 – 174

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Information is encoded in neural networks through changes in synaptic weights. Synaptic learning rules involve a combination of rapid Hebbian plasticity and slower homeostatic synaptic plasticity that regulates neuronal activity through global synaptic scaling. Hebbian and homeostatic plasticity have been extensively investigated, whereas much less is known about their interaction. Here we investigated structural and functional consequences of homeostatic plasticity at dendritic spines of mouse hippocampal neurons. We found that prolonged activity blockade induced spine growth, paralleling synaptic strength increases. Following activity blockade, glutamate uncaging-mediated stimulation at single spines led to size-dependent structural potentiation: smaller spines underwent robust growth, whereas larger spines remained unchanged. Moreover, spines near the stimulated spine exhibited volume changes following homeostatic plasticity, indicating that there was a breakdown of input specificity following homeostatic plasticity. Overall, these findings demonstrate that Hebbian and homeostatic plasticity interact to shape neural connectivity through non-uniform structural plasticity at inputs. : Optical Imaging; Neuroscience; Cellular Neuroscience Subject Areas: Optical Imaging, Neuroscience, Cellular Neuroscience