Silent synapses and the emergence of a postsynaptic mechanism for LTP

GA Kerchner, RA Nicoll - Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2008 - nature.com
GA Kerchner, RA Nicoll
Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2008nature.com
Silent synapses abound in the young brain, representing an early step in the pathway of
experience-dependent synaptic development. Discovered amidst the debate over whether
long-term potentiation reflects a presynaptic or a postsynaptic modification, silent synapses—
which in the hippocampal CA1 subfield are characterized by the presence of NMDA
receptors but not AMPA receptors—have stirred some mechanistic controversy of their own.
Out of this literature has emerged a model for synapse unsilencing that highlights the central …
Abstract
Silent synapses abound in the young brain, representing an early step in the pathway of experience-dependent synaptic development. Discovered amidst the debate over whether long-term potentiation reflects a presynaptic or a postsynaptic modification, silent synapses — which in the hippocampal CA1 subfield are characterized by the presence of NMDA receptors but not AMPA receptors — have stirred some mechanistic controversy of their own. Out of this literature has emerged a model for synapse unsilencing that highlights the central role for postsynaptic AMPA-receptor trafficking in the expression of excitatory synaptic plasticity.
nature.com