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Disassembly and rewiring of a mature converging excitatory circuit following injury.

Authors :
Della Santina, Luca
Della Santina, Luca
Yu, Alfred K
Harris, Scott C
Soliño, Manuel
Garcia Ruiz, Tonatiuh
Most, Jesse
Kuo, Yien-Ming
Dunn, Felice A
Ou, Yvonne
Della Santina, Luca
Della Santina, Luca
Yu, Alfred K
Harris, Scott C
Soliño, Manuel
Garcia Ruiz, Tonatiuh
Most, Jesse
Kuo, Yien-Ming
Dunn, Felice A
Ou, Yvonne
Source :
Cell reports; vol 36, iss 5, 109463; 2211-1247
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Specificity and timing of synapse disassembly in the CNS are essential to learning how individual circuits react to neurodegeneration of the postsynaptic neuron. In sensory systems such as the mammalian retina, synaptic connections of second-order neurons are known to remodel and reconnect in the face of sensory cell loss. Here we analyzed whether degenerating third-order neurons can remodel their local presynaptic connectivity. We injured adult retinal ganglion cells by transiently elevating intraocular pressure. We show that loss of presynaptic structures occurs before postsynaptic density proteins and accounts for impaired transmission from presynaptic neurons, despite no evidence of presynaptic cell loss, axon terminal shrinkage, or reduced functional input. Loss of synapses is biased among converging presynaptic neuron types, with preferential loss of the major excitatory cone-driven partner and increased connectivity with rod-driven presynaptic partners, demonstrating that this adult neural circuit is capable of structural plasticity while undergoing neurodegeneration.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Cell reports; vol 36, iss 5, 109463; 2211-1247
Notes :
application/pdf, Cell reports vol 36, iss 5, 109463 2211-1247
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367393200
Document Type :
Electronic Resource