Abstract

Most models of learning and memory assume that memories are maintained in neuronal circuits by persistent synaptic modifications induced by specific patterns of pre- and postsynaptic activity. For this scenario to be viable, synaptic modifications must survive the ubiquitous ongoing activity present in neural circuits in vivo. In this paper, we investigate the time scales of memory maintenance in a calcium-based synaptic plasticity model that has been shown recently to be able to fit different experimental data-sets from hippocampal and neocortical preparations. We find that in the presence of background activity on the order of 1 Hz parameters that fit pyramidal layer 5 neocortical data lead to a very fast decay of synaptic efficacy, with time scales of minutes. We then identify two ways in which this memory time scale can be extended: (i) the extracellular calcium concentration in the experiments used to fit the model are larger than estimated concentrations in vivo. Lowering extracellular calcium concentration to in vivo levels leads to an increase in memory time scales of several orders of magnitude; (ii) adding a bistability mechanism so that each synapse has two stable states at sufficiently low background activity leads to a further boost in memory time scale, since memory decay is no longer described by an exponential decay from an initial state, but by an escape from a potential well. We argue that both features are expected to be present in synapses in vivo. These results are obtained first in a single synapse connecting two independent Poisson neurons, and then in simulations of a large network of excitatory and inhibitory integrate-and-fire neurons. Our results emphasise the need for studying plasticity at physiological extracellular calcium concentration, and highlight the role of synaptic bi- or multistability in the stability of learned synaptic structures.

Highlights

  • Many experiments have shown that long-lasting changes in synaptic efficacy can be induced by spiking activity of pre- and postsynaptic neurons [1,2]

  • A model in which plasticity is driven by the postsynaptic calcium concentration was shown to reproduce successfully how synaptic changes depend on spike timing, specific spike patterns, and firing rate

  • We find that the memory time scales increase by several orders of magnitude when calcium concentrations are lowered from typical in vitro experiments to in vivo

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Summary

Introduction

Many experiments have shown that long-lasting changes in synaptic efficacy can be induced by spiking activity of pre- and postsynaptic neurons [1,2]. In hippocampal and neocortical in-vitro preparations, both long-term potentiation and depression can be induced by protocols in which pre- and postsynaptic neurons emit tens to hundreds of spikes in specific temporal patterns [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. In those preparations, plasticity has been shown to depend both on relative timing of pre- and postsynaptic spikes (‘spike timing dependent plasticity’, or STDP), and the firing rates of pre- and postsynaptic neurons. We study the decay of the synaptic memory trace due to background activity using a theoretical approach

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