Hippocampal Theta Input to the Amygdala Shapes Feedforward Inhibition to Gate Heterosynaptic Plasticity
Autor: | Bazelot, M, Bocchio, M, Kasugai, Y, Fischer, D, Dodson, P, Ferraguti, F, Capogna, M |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Neuron |
ISSN: | 0896-6273 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.08.024 |
Popis: | Summary The dynamic interactions between hippocampus and amygdala are critical for emotional memory. Theta synchrony between these structures occurs during fear memory retrieval and may facilitate synaptic plasticity, but the cellular mechanisms are unknown. We report that interneurons of the mouse basal amygdala are activated during theta network activity or optogenetic stimulation of ventral CA1 pyramidal cell axons, whereas principal neurons are inhibited. Interneurons provide feedforward inhibition that transiently hyperpolarizes principal neurons. However, synaptic inhibition attenuates during theta frequency stimulation of ventral CA1 fibers, and this broadens excitatory postsynaptic potentials. These effects are mediated by GABAB receptors and change in the Cl− driving force. Pairing theta frequency stimulation of ventral CA1 fibers with coincident stimuli of the lateral amygdala induces long-term potentiation of lateral-basal amygdala excitatory synapses. Hence, feedforward inhibition, known to enforce temporal fidelity of excitatory inputs, dominates hippocampus-amygdala interactions to gate heterosynaptic plasticity. Video Abstract Highlights • Theta stimulation of CA1 ventral hippocampal fibers activates amygdala interneurons • Interneurons induce feedforward inhibition that hyperpolarizes principal neurons • Theta-evoked inhibition attenuates to broaden excitation on principal neurons • Feedforward inhibition gates heterosynaptic plasticity via GABAB receptors Hippocampal-amygdala interactions are critical for emotional memory, but the cellular mechanisms are unknown. In this paper, Bazelot, Bocchio et al. functionally demonstrate that GABAergic neurons of the basal amygdala gate principal neuron firing and heterosynaptic plasticity in the mouse amygdala. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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