Heterozygous knock-out mice for brain-derived neurotrophic factor show a pathway-specific impairment of long-term potentiation but normal critical period for monocular deprivation
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2002
Abstract:
Genetic deletion of a single allele of the BDNF gene affects hippocampal
LTP and causes several behavioral phenotypes, including deficits in
spatial learning. In the developing visual cortex, overexpression of BDNF
accelerates the time course of the critical period for monocular
deprivation (MD), and exogenous administration of BDNF alters the outcome
of MD. We asked whether reduced levels of BDNF could affect visual cortex
plasticity by studying long-term potentiation (LTP) induction and the
effects of MD in heterozygous BDNF knock-out mice. We found that theta
burst stimulation that induced LTP in the layer IV-III pathway of wild-
type (wt) mice caused only a transient potentiation in BDNF+/- mice, and
that this potentiation vanished in 25 min. In contrast, LTP elicited by
stimulation of the white matter (WM), a form of LTP that can be induced
only during the critical period, occurred normally in wt and BDNF+/- mice.
The effects of MD during the critical period were similar in wt and BDNF+/-
mice, indicating that layer IV-evoked, layer III LTP is not required for
ocular dominance plasticity. We then asked whether reduction of cortical
BDNF levels could prolong the critical period for MD and for the WM-
evoked, layer III LTP induction. We found that in adult BDNF+/- mice, WM-
evoked, layer III LTP was not inducible, and that the critical period for
MD terminated normally. We conclude that deletion of one copy of the BDNF
gene selectively impairs LTP of
the layer IV-III pathway but does not alter ocular dominance plasticity
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
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