Spike timing-dependent synaptic plasticity (STDP) plays an important role in neural development and information processing in the brain; however, the mechanism by which spike timing information is encoded into STDP remains unclear. Here, we show that a novel allosteric kinetics of NMDA receptors (NMDARs) is required for STDP. We developed a detailed biophysical model of STDP and found that the model required spike timing-dependent distinct suppression of NMDARs by Ca(2+)-calmodulin. This led us to predict an allosteric kinetics of NMDARs: a slow and rapid suppression of NMDARs by Ca(2+)-calmodulin with prespiking --> postspiking and postspiking --> prespiking, respectively. We found that the allosteric kinetics, but not the conventional kinetics, is consistent with specific features of amplitudes and peak time of NMDAR-mediated EPSPs in experiments. We found that the allosteric kinetics of NMDARs was also valid for synaptic plasticity induced by more complex spike trains in layer II/III of visual cortex. We extracted an essential synaptic learning rule by reduction of the allosteric STDP model and found that spike timing-dependent bidirectional role of postspiking in synaptic modification, which depends on the allosteric kinetics, is the essential principle in STDP. Thus, we propose a simple hypothesis of the allosteric kinetics of NMDARs that can coherently explain critical features of spike timing-dependent NMDAR-mediated EPSPs and synaptic plasticity
SFX:
Journal of neuroscience. 2008:28(13):3310-23.
DOI:
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0303-08.2008
PMID:
18367598
ISSN:
1529-2401
CID:
109175