Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience (Feb 2025)

Postsynaptic spiking determines anti-Hebbian LTD in visual cortex basket cells

  • Christina Y. C. Chou,
  • Christina Y. C. Chou,
  • Wouter J. Droogers,
  • Txomin Lalanne,
  • Txomin Lalanne,
  • Eric Fineberg,
  • Tal Klimenko,
  • Hannah Owens,
  • P. Jesper Sjöström

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsyn.2025.1548563
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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Long-term plasticity at pyramidal cell to basket cell (PC → BC) synapses is important for the functioning of cortical microcircuits. It is well known that at neocortical PC → PC synapses, dendritic calcium (Ca2+) dynamics signal coincident pre-and postsynaptic spiking which in turn triggers long-term potentiation (LTP). However, the link between dendritic Ca2+ dynamics and long-term plasticity at PC → BC synapses of primary visual cortex (V1) is not as well known. Here, we explored if PC → BC synaptic plasticity in developing V1 is sensitive to postsynaptic spiking. Two-photon (2P) Ca2+ imaging revealed that action potentials (APs) in dendrites of V1 layer-5 (L5) BCs back-propagated decrementally but actively to the location of PC → BC putative synaptic contacts. Pairing excitatory inputs with postsynaptic APs elicited dendritic Ca2+ supralinearities for pre-before-postsynaptic but not post-before-presynaptic temporal ordering, suggesting that APs could impact synaptic plasticity. In agreement, extracellular stimulation as well as high-throughput 2P optogenetic mapping of plasticity both revealed that pre-before-postsynaptic but not post-before-presynaptic pairing resulted in anti-Hebbian long-term depression (LTD). Our results demonstrate that V1 BC dendritic Ca2+ nonlinearities and synaptic plasticity at PC → BC connections are both sensitive to somatic spiking.

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