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Cyclic nucleotide-induced bidirectional long-term synaptic plasticity in Drosophila mushroom body

Yamada, D., Davidson, A. M., Hige, T.

biorxiv · 2024

Abstract

Activation of the cAMP pathway is one of the common mechanisms underlying long-term potentiation (LTP). In the Drosophila mushroom body, simultaneous activation of odor-coding Kenyon cells (KCs) and reinforcement-coding dopaminergic neurons activates adenylyl cyclase in KC presynaptic terminals, which is believed to trigger synaptic plasticity underlying olfactory associative learning. However, learning induces long-term depression (LTD) at these synapses, contradicting the universal role of cAMP as a facilitator of transmission. Here, we develop a system to electrophysiologically monitor both short-term and long-term synaptic plasticity at KC output synapses and demonstrate that they are indeed an exception where activation of the cAMP/protein kinase A pathway induces LTD. Contrary to the prevailing model, our cAMP imaging finds no evidence for synergistic action of dopamine and KC activity on cAMP synthesis. Furthermore, we find that forskolin-induced cAMP increase alone is insufficient for plasticity induction; it additionally requires simultaneous KC activation to replicate the presynaptic LTD induced by pairing with dopamine. On the other hand, activation of the cGMP pathway paired with KC activation induces slowly developing LTP, proving antagonistic actions of the two second-messenger pathways predicted by behavioral study. Finally, KC subtype-specific interrogation of synapses reveals that different KC subtypes exhibit distinct plasticity duration even among synapses on the same postsynaptic neuron. Thus, our work not only revises the role of cAMP in synaptic plasticity by uncovering the unexpected convergence point of the cAMP pathway and neuronal activity, but also establishes the methods to address physiological mechanisms of synaptic plasticity in this important model. Abstract FigureMushroom body (MB) is the olfactory learning center of the Drosophila brain (left). Dopamine input activates the cAMP/Protein kinase A pathway in Kenyon cells (KCs), the principal neurons of the MB. When it coincides with KC activity, it induces presynaptic long-term depression at the synapses on the MB output neuron (Top right). A subset of dopaminergic neurons is also known to release nitric oxide, which activates the cGMP pathway. When it coincides with KC activity, it induces long-term potentiation (Bottom right). Created with BioRender.com.

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Provenance

Source
bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/2023.09.28.560058
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-05-31 MST

Cite this

APA
D., Y., M., D.A., &amp; T., H. (2024). Cyclic nucleotide-induced bidirectional long-term synaptic plasticity in Drosophila mushroom body. <em>biorxiv</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.28.560058
Vancouver
D. Y, M. DA, T. H. Cyclic nucleotide-induced bidirectional long-term synaptic plasticity in Drosophila mushroom body. biorxiv. 2024. doi:10.1101/2023.09.28.560058.
BibTeX
@unpublished{yamada2024Cyclic, title = {Cyclic nucleotide-induced bidirectional long-term synaptic plasticity in Drosophila mushroom body}, author = {Yamada, D. and Davidson, A. M. and Hige, T.}, journal = {biorxiv}, year = {2024}, doi = {10.1101/2023.09.28.560058}, }

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