210 research outputs found

    Presynaptic adenosine receptor-mediated regulation of diverse thalamocortical short-term plasticity in the mouse whisker pathway

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    Short-term synaptic plasticity (STP) sets the sensitivity of a synapse to incoming activity and determines the temporal patterns that it best transmits. In “driver” thalamocortical (TC) synaptic populations, STP is dominated by depression during stimulation from rest. However, during ongoing stimulation, lemniscal TC connections onto layer 4 neurons in mouse barrel cortex express variable STP. Each synapse responds to input trains with a distinct pattern of depression or facilitation around its mean steady-state response. As a result, in common with other synaptic populations, lemniscal TC synapses express diverse rather than uniform dynamics, allowing for a rich representation of temporally varying stimuli. Here, we show that this STP diversity is regulated presynaptically. Presynaptic adenosine receptors of the A1R type, but not kainate receptors (KARs), modulate STP behavior. Blocking the receptors does not eliminate diversity, indicating that diversity is related to heterogeneous expression of multiple mechanisms in the pathway from presynaptic calcium influx to neurotransmitter release

    Synaptic Transmission Optimization Predicts Expression Loci of Long-Term Plasticity

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    Long-term modifications of neuronal connections are critical for reliable memory storage in the brain. However, their locus of expression—pre- or postsynaptic—is highly variable. Here we introduce a theoretical framework in which long-term plasticity performs an optimization of the postsynaptic response statistics toward a given mean with minimal variance. Consequently, the state of the synapse at the time of plasticity induction determines the ratio of pre- and postsynaptic modifications. Our theory explains the experimentally observed expression loci of the hippocampal and neocortical synaptic potentiation studies we examined. Moreover, the theory predicts presynaptic expression of long-term depression, consistent with experimental observations. At inhibitory synapses, the theory suggests a statistically efficient excitatory-inhibitory balance in which changes in inhibitory postsynaptic response statistics specifically target the mean excitation. Our results provide a unifying theory for understanding the expression mechanisms and functions of long-term synaptic transmission plasticity

    The Neuronal Transition Probability (NTP) Model for the Dynamic Progression of Non-REM Sleep EEG: The Role of the Suprachiasmatic Nucleus

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    Little attention has gone into linking to its neuronal substrates the dynamic structure of non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep, defined as the pattern of time-course power in all frequency bands across an entire episode. Using the spectral power time-courses in the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG), we showed in the typical first episode, several moves towards-and-away from deep sleep, each having an identical pattern linking the major frequency bands beta, sigma and delta. The neuronal transition probability model (NTP) – in fitting the data well – successfully explained the pattern as resulting from stochastic transitions of the firing-rates of the thalamically-projecting brainstem-activating neurons, alternating between two steady dynamic-states (towards-and-away from deep sleep) each initiated by a so-far unidentified flip-flop. The aims here are to identify this flip-flop and to demonstrate that the model fits well all NREM episodes, not just the first. Using published data on suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) activity we show that the SCN has the information required to provide a threshold-triggered flip-flop for timing the towards-and-away alternations, information provided by sleep-relevant feedback to the SCN. NTP then determines the pattern of spectral power within each dynamic-state. NTP was fitted to individual NREM episodes 1–4, using data from 30 healthy subjects aged 20–30 years, and the quality of fit for each NREM measured. We show that the model fits well all NREM episodes and the best-fit probability-set is found to be effectively the same in fitting all subject data. The significant model-data agreement, the constant probability parameter and the proposed role of the SCN add considerable strength to the model. With it we link for the first time findings at cellular level and detailed time-course data at EEG level, to give a coherent picture of NREM dynamics over the entire night and over hierarchic brain levels all the way from the SCN to the EEG

    Metabolic Turnover of Synaptic Proteins: Kinetics, Interdependencies and Implications for Synaptic Maintenance

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    Chemical synapses contain multitudes of proteins, which in common with all proteins, have finite lifetimes and therefore need to be continuously replaced. Given the huge numbers of synaptic connections typical neurons form, the demand to maintain the protein contents of these connections might be expected to place considerable metabolic demands on each neuron. Moreover, synaptic proteostasis might differ according to distance from global protein synthesis sites, the availability of distributed protein synthesis facilities, trafficking rates and synaptic protein dynamics. To date, the turnover kinetics of synaptic proteins have not been studied or analyzed systematically, and thus metabolic demands or the aforementioned relationships remain largely unknown. In the current study we used dynamic Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino acids in Cell culture (SILAC), mass spectrometry (MS), Fluorescent Non-Canonical Amino acid Tagging (FUNCAT), quantitative immunohistochemistry and bioinformatics to systematically measure the metabolic half-lives of hundreds of synaptic proteins, examine how these depend on their pre/postsynaptic affiliation or their association with particular molecular complexes, and assess the metabolic load of synaptic proteostasis. We found that nearly all synaptic proteins identified here exhibited half-lifetimes in the range of 2-5 days. Unexpectedly, metabolic turnover rates were not significantly different for presynaptic and postsynaptic proteins, or for proteins for which mRNAs are consistently found in dendrites. Some functionally or structurally related proteins exhibited very similar turnover rates, indicating that their biogenesis and degradation might be coupled, a possibility further supported by bioinformatics-based analyses. The relatively low turnover rates measured here (∼0.7% of synaptic protein content per hour) are in good agreement with imaging-based studies of synaptic protein trafficking, yet indicate that the metabolic load synaptic protein turnover places on individual neurons is very substantial

    Enjeux, problématiques et situation de la traduction de la poésie contemporaine

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    Traduire la poésie: journée d'étude pluridisciplinaire En cette saison propice à la poésie (c'est le Printemps des poètes) le CERIEC et le 3L.AM s'associent à la faculté des lettres, langues et sciences humaines pour organiser, dans le cadre de l'axe "Écritures et cultures" de Confluences une journée d'étude consacrée aux enjeux de la traduction poétique. Le programme de cette journée, qui devrait particulièrement intéresser les étudiants du Master 2 Traduction, propose des regards croisés su..

    Les Mardis de Confluences / conférence du 6 décembre 2016

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    Quelle laïcité pour notre société ? Mardi 6 décembre 2016            18h-20h           Maison de la recherche Germaine Tillion – UFR LLSH - Campus de Belle-Beille 5bis, Boulevard Lavoisier - Angers  Intervenants : Jean-Michel YVARD (Maître de conférences en anglais)  Perspectives croisées (France, Grande-Bretagne, Etats-Unis) sur les notions de sécularisation et de laïcité Après les attentats de Charlie Hebdo puis ceux de Nice, les caricatures publiées dans le journal satirique français puis..

    Calendrier du séminaire Mardis du genre 2013-2014

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    Date Intervenant.e.s Titre de l’intervention à la MSH 12h-14h 24 /9 Réunion de rentrée Kahlo 15 /10 Georges  Vigarello, directeur de recherche à l’EHESS « Histoire de la virilité » Tillion 12/11 Arnaud Alessandrin, docteur en sociologie, Université de Bordeaux, chercheur au Centre Emile Durkeim, co-auteur de Géographie des homophobies (2013)Karine Espineira, docteure en sciences de l’information et de la communication, a dirigé avec Maud-Yeuse Thomas et Arnaud Alessandri..

    Les Mardis de Confluences - conférence du 30 novembre 2015

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    Mardis de Confluences 2015-2016 « Où est Charlie ? » La SFR Confluences redémarre son cycle de conférences débats ouvertes à tous. Après le thème des « Performances », c’est désormais aux tenants et aux aboutissants des attentats de Charlie hebdo que différents chercheurs en sciences humaines vont s’intéresser de novembre 2015 à mai 2016. Ce cycle intitulé « Où est Charlie ? » ne questionnera pas exclusivement l’attentat survenu dans les locaux de Charlie Hebdo en janvier dernier, mais porter..

    Les Lundis de la MSH à Angers - conférence d'Eric Fassin

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    "Race et histoire aujourd’hui"    -  Conférence d'Eric Fassin Lundi 22 mai à 18h Maison de la recherche Germaine Tillion Entrée libre et gratuite En 1952, la publication de Race et histoire par Claude Lévi-Strauss sous l’égide de l’UNESCO exluait le mot « race » du vocabulaire scientifique pour lui substituer celui de « culture ». C’était au lendemain de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, mais aussi à la veille de la décolonisation. Autrement dit, à rebours du Discours sur le colonialisme d’Aimé Cés..
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