A Kinetic Model Unifying Presynaptic Short-Term Facilitation and Depression
Author(s)
Lee, Chuang-Chung J.; Anton, Mihai; Poon, Chi-Sang; McRae, Gregory J.
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Short-term facilitation and depression refer to the increase and decrease of synaptic strength under repetitive stimuli within a timescale of milliseconds to seconds. This phenomenon has been attributed to primarily presynaptic mechanisms such as calcium-dependent transmitter release and presynaptic vesicle depletion. Previous modeling studies that aimed to integrate the complex short-term facilitation and short-term depression data derived from varying synapses have relied on computer simulation or abstract mathematical approaches. Here, we propose a unified theory of synaptic short-term plasticity based on realistic yet tractable and testable model descriptions of the underlying intracellular biochemical processes. Analysis of the model equations leads to a closed-form solution of the resonance frequency, a function of several critical biophysical parameters, as the single key indicator of the propensity for synaptic facilitation or depression under repetitive stimuli. This integrative model is supported by a broad range of transient and frequency response experimental data including those from facilitating, depressing or mixed-mode synapses. Specifically, the theory predicts that high calcium initial concentration and large gain of calcium action result in low resonance frequency and hence depressing behavior. In contrast, for synapses that are less sensitive to calcium or have higher recovery rate, resonance frequency becomes higher and thus facilitation prevails. The notion of resonance frequency therefore allows valuable quantitative parametric assessment of the contributions of various presynaptic mechanisms to the directionality of synaptic short-term plasticity. Thus, the model provides the reasons behind the switching behavior between facilitation and depression observed in experiments. New experiments are also suggested to control the short-term synaptic signal processing through adjusting the resonance frequency and bandwidth.
Date issued
2009-06Department
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical EngineeringJournal
Journal of Computational Neuroscience
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
C. Lee, M. Anton, C. Poon, and G. McRae, “A kinetic model unifying presynaptic short-term facilitation and depression,” Journal of Computational Neuroscience, vol. 26, Jun. 2009, pp. 459-473.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1573-6873
0929-5313
Keywords
resonance frequency, frequency response, transmitter release, short-term depression