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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 1999, 19(5):15991609

Modulation of Long-Term Synaptic Depression in Visual Cortex by Acetylcholine and Norepinephrine


Alfredo Kirkwood,1 Carlos Rozas,1 John Kirkwood,2 Fernanda Perez,2 and Mark F. Bear2
1

Mind Brain Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, and 2Department of Neuroscience, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912

In a slice preparation of rat visual cortex, we discovered that paired-pulse stimulation (PPS) elicits a form of homosynaptic long-term depression (LTD) in the supercial layers when carbachol (CCh) or norepinephrine (NE) is applied concurrently. PPS by itself, or CCh and NE in the absence of synaptic stimulation, produced no lasting change. The LTD induced by PPS in the presence of NE or CCh is of comparable magnitude with that obtained with prolonged low-frequency stimulation (LFS) but requires far fewer stimulation pulses (40 vs 900). The cholinergic facilitation of LTD was blocked by atropine and pirenzepine, suggesting involvement of M1 receptors. The noradrenergic facilitation of LTD was blocked by urapidil and was It is well established that synapses in sensory neocortex can be modied by experience. For example, brief deprivation of normal vision during early postnatal development can lead to a depression of synaptic transmission that renders visual cortical neurons unresponsive to retinal stimulation. This type of synaptic plasticity obviously depends on information of retinal origin. However, there is evidence that experience-dependent plasticity also requires that animals be awake, alert, and paying attention to sensory stimuli (for review, see Singer, 1995). Thus, issues of great interest are the mechanisms of experience-dependent synaptic plasticity and their modulation by behavioral state. Extrathalamic inputs convey information to the cortex about behavioral state. Attention has focused mainly on the inputs arising from the locus coeruleus and the basal telencephalon that use norepinephrine (N E) and acetylcholine (ACh), respectively, as neurotransmitters. In one early study, it was shown that partial destruction of the noradrenergic or the cholinergic inputs alone did not disrupt deprivation-induced synaptic depression in visual cortex. However, their combined destruction produced a large decit in this form of experience-dependent plasticity (Bear and Singer, 1986). The results of this experiment suggested that both of these inputs to visual cortex facilitate synaptic plasticity. Furthermore, because the simultaneous loss of both noradrenergic and cholinergic inputs was required to produce the defect in plasticity, the suggestion was made that these two modulators may substitute for one another and act via a common molecular mechanism. The notion that ACh and N E modulate naturally occurring
Received July 30, 1998; revised Dec. 10, 1998; accepted Dec. 14, 1998. This work was partly supported by grants from the National Eye Institute, the National Science Foundation, and the Charles A. Dana Foundation. We thank Dr. K im Huber for helpf ul comments. Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Mark Bear, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912. Copyright 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/191599-11$05.00/0

mimicked by methoxamine, suggesting involvement of 1 receptors. receptor agonists and antagonists were without effect. Induction of LTD by PPS was inhibited by NMDA receptor blockers (completely in the case of NE; partially in the case of CCh), suggesting that one action of the modulators is to control the gain of NMDA receptor-dependent homosynaptic LTD in visual cortex. We propose that this is a mechanism by which cholinergic and noradrenergic inputs to the neocortex modulate naturally occurring receptive eld plasticity. Key words: visual cortex; development; synaptic plasticity; long-term potentiation; long-term depression; acetylcholine; norepinephrine cortical plasticity has received ample support (Kasamatsu and Pettigrew, 1979; Gordon et al., 1990; Juliano et al., 1991; Gu and Singer, 1993; Osterheld-Haas et al., 1994; Bakin and Weinberger, 1996; Baskerville et al., 1997; Kilgard and Merzenich, 1998; Sachdev et al., 1998; Zhu and Waite, 1998). The important question that remains, of course, is precisely how these neurotransmitters affect the cortical synapses that carry detailed information about sensory experience. Over the past several years, slice preparations of visual neocortex have been used in an effort to clarify the elementary mechanisms of activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. One hypothesis that derived from this work is that modulation of inhibition in the cortex might be a way in which ACh and NE control plasticity (Kirkwood and Bear, 1994a). Because the state of functional inhibition in the cortex can be assayed by recording layer III responses to paired-pulse stimulation (PPS) of the white matter (Luhmann and Prince, 1991; Metherate and Ashe, 1994), we set out to examine the effects of ACh and NE on responses to PPS. In the course of this investigation we made the unexpected discovery that PPS in the presence of ACh or NE triggers a form of long-term synaptic depression (LTD). Here we report that ACh, acting via M1 receptors, and NE, acting via 1 receptors, dramatically facilitate NMDA receptor-dependent homosynaptic LTD in visual cortex. We suggest that this reects a mechanism whereby these modulators facilitate experience-dependent synaptic plasticity in sensory neocortex.

MATERIALS AND METHODS


The experiments described in this paper were performed on transverse slices prepared from the visual cortex of 3- to 5-week-old L ongEvans rats. Each animal was deeply anesthetized by exposure to methoxyurane vapors and was decapitated soon after the disappearance of any corneal reexes. The brain was rapidly removed and immersed in icecold dissection buffer containing (in mM): sucrose, 212.7; KC l, 5; NaH2PO4 , 1.25; MgSO4 , 3; C aC l2 , 1; NaHC O3 , 26; dextrose, 10; and kynurenate, 10. A block of visual cortex was removed and sectioned in

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the coronal plane into 0.4-mm-thick slices using a microslicer (DTK 1000; Ted Pella, Redding, CA). The slices were gently transferred to an interface storage chamber containing articial C SF (AC SF) and maintained at room temperature for at least an hour before recording. The AC SF was saturated with 95% O2 /5% C O2 and contained (in mM): NaC l, 124; KC l, 5; NaH2PO4 , 1.25; MgC l2 , 1; C aC l2 , 2; NaHC O3 , 26; and dextrose, 10. The experiments were performed on submerged slices continuously perf used at a rate of 2 ml /min with 30C AC SF saturated with 95% O2 /5% C O2. Microelectrodes were lled with AC SF (12 M) for extracellular recording or 3 M potassium acetate (80 120 M) for intracellular recording. Only cells with resting membrane potentials more negative than 70 mV and input resistances 20 M were studied. A site in the middle of the cortical thickness, conrmed histologically to correspond to layer IV and upper layer V, was stimulated to evoke eld potentials (FPs) in layer III, as described previously (K irkwood and Bear, 1994a,b). The amplitude of the maximum negative FP in layer III was used as a measure of the evoked population excitatory synaptic current. Changes in the amplitude of the maximum negative FP reect changes in the magnitude of a synaptic current sink (Mitzdorf, 1985; Aizenman et al., 1996) and correlate with changes in the initial slope of EPSPs recorded intracellularly in layer III neurons (K irkwood and Bear, 1994a,b). Baseline responses were obtained every 15 sec with a stimulation intensity that yielded a half-maximal response. PPS was used throughout the experiment unless stated otherwise. At least 10 min of stable baseline recordings were made before drugs were applied. When N E was applied, 40 M sodium ascorbate was included in the AC SF to prevent oxidation of the drug. Sodium ascorbate was also included with the application of noradrenergic agonists and antagonists. C arbachol and atropine were purchased from Sigma (St. L ouis, MO); all other drugs were purchased from Research Biochemicals (Natick, M A). Only data from slices with stable recordings (3% change over the baseline period) were included in the analysis. The data were analyzed as follows: (1) the maximum negative FP amplitude data for each experiment were expressed as percentages of the preconditioning baseline average; (2) the time scale in each experiment was converted to time from the onset of conditioning, and the four responses recorded in each minute were averaged; and (3) then, the time-matched, normalized data were averaged across experiments and expressed as the means ( SEM). Within each group, the statistical signicance of a change produced by conditioning stimulation was assessed with a paired t test, comparing values immediately before the application of neuromodulators with those 30 min after the end of the application. Statistical signicance across groups was assessed with an unpaired t test.

RESULTS
Visual cortical slices were prepared from 3- to 5-week-old rats. Initially, layer III synaptic responses were evoked with stimulation applied to the underlying white matter. Our original goal was to study the effects of cholinergic and noradrenergic stimulation on paired-pulse suppression, i.e., the attenuation of the synaptic responses when two pulses are given in rapid succession. In these experiments, the stimulation consisted of two pulses (40 msec apart) delivered repetitively every 15 sec throughout the experiment. To activate cholinergic receptors, we bath applied 50 M carbachol (CCh), and to activate noradrenergic receptors, we bath applied 40 M N E in ascorbate (40 M). When we realized that the PPS in the presence of these modulators caused LTD, we shifted the stimulating electrode to layer IV to activate a less complex circuit. All the data presented below were obtained with this stimulation-recording conguration.

of control measured at 10 min of CCh), but it had a smaller effect on the response to the second pulse. Thus, paired-pulse suppression was virtually eliminated in the presence of CCh; the ratio of the second to the rst response was 0.99 0.14 at the end of the 10 min of CCh perfusion. These acute effects of CChthat is, the transient and reversible reduction of the synaptic responses and the reduction in paired-pulse suppressionhave been reported previously (Vaknin and Teyler, 1991; Murakoshi, 1995). These effects are likely to reect a reduced probability of glutamate release (Markram and Tsodyks, 1996; Gil et al., 1997), probably because of the action of CCh on cholinergic receptors located on glutamatergic presynaptic terminals (Valentino and Dingledine, 1981; Segal, 1982; Dodt et al., 1991; Vaknin and Teyler, 1991). An unexpected result, however, was that after removal of CCh the responses to the rst stimulation pulse never returned to the original level. After an initial partial recovery, the response magnitude reached a stable level 20 min after washing out the CCh and remained depressed (80 6% of control) even after an additional 30 min of washout. The LTD was a specic consequence of the CCh, because prolonged PPS by itself had no effect on the FPs (Fig. 1C). To conrm that the changes in the FP reect changes in excitatory synaptic transmission, we repeated the experiment using intracellular recording. Simultaneous recordings were made of the evoked FP in layer III and the EPSP in a nearby layer III neuron. PPS during CCh resulted in a reduction of FP amplitude (70 6%) that was paralleled by a comparable reduction in the initial slope of the EPSPs (73 8%; n 7), indicating that a reduction of the synaptic responses of layer II/III cells is reected in the reduction of the eld responses. The application of CCh also produced a modest depolarization that was rapidly reversed after removal of the drug. Thus the LTD of FP responses is not caused by a tonic depolarization of postsynaptic neurons. To determine whether the slight depolarization of the neuron by CCh during PPS was the cause of LTD, we injected current intracellularly that yielded similar levels of depolarization (10 mV for 12 min; n 3). However, in no case was LTD observed, suggesting that the depolarization alone (at least in the cell soma) is not sufcient to cause expression of the LTD. The LTD induced by PPS in 50 M CCh was very reliable, so this procedure was used to characterize the phenomenon. However, we did examine the CCh doseresponse relationship. By the use of a 20 min application during PPS, LTD of increasing magnitude (measured 30 min after washout) was observed with 0.1 M (94 2% of baseline; n 7), 1 M (81 3%; n 7), 10 M (84 3%; n 7), 50 M (72 3%; n 8), and 100 M CCh (68 4%; n 7).

Synaptic depression induced in the presence of carbachol requires synaptic stimulation and is input specic
An important issue to be resolved concerned the role of synaptic activation in the depression induced with CCh. Thus we asked whether CCh applied alone, without concurrent synaptic activation, would be sufcient to produce LTD. Figure 2 shows that in the absence of stimulation, CCh application has minor effects on the synaptic responses (97 4% of baseline; paired t test, p 0.2; n 5). However, subsequent administration of CCh in the same slices during PPS did result in substantial depression (78 4%; p 0.02). These results indicate that CCh permits or facilitates an activity-dependent form of synaptic depression. These ndings also eliminate the possibility that the lasting depression is

Paired-pulse stimulation in carbachol induces a longlasting depression of the synaptic responses Figure 1 illustrates the effects of a 10 min application of 50 M

CCh on the FP responses to paired pulses. Under control conditions, the response amplitude to the second pulse is usually somewhat smaller than the response amplitude to the rst pulse. In the experiments shown in Figure 1, the ratio of the second response to the rst response is 0.59 0.08 (n 11). Exposure to CCh strongly reduced the response to the rst pulse (64 4%

Kirkwood et al. Modulation of Visual Cortical Plasticity by ACh and NE

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Figure 1. The cholinergic agonist CCh induces a lasting depression of the layer III synaptic responses to layer IV stimulation. A, B, Effects of a brief (10 min) bath application of CCh (50 M; open horizontal bar in B) on the eld responses evoked with paired-pulse stimulation [interstimulus interval (ISI) 40 msec] are shown. A, FPs are from an experiment in which the CCh application resulted in a clear depression of the response to the rst pulse but had virtually no effect on the response to the second pulse. The traces were recorded immediately before (control) and during the application of CCh and 30 min after washout of the drug. B, Time course of the average of 11 experiments is shown. Solid circles are responses to the rst pulse; open circles are responses to the second pulse. C, Prolonged paired-pulse stimulation alone has no effect on the FPs (n 9). D, E, The effects of CCh on FPs correlate with changes in simultaneously recorded intracellular EPSPs. D, Traces are averages of four consecutive intracellular (top) and extracellular (bottom) responses recorded before (control) and 30 min after washout of CCh. E, Average time course of seven similar experiments is shown. Top, Changes in FP amplitude (open circles) and initial slope of the EPSP ( lled triangles) are presented. Bottom, Changes in the membrane potential are shown.

caused by tonic activation of ACh receptors (i.e., incomplete washout of CCh). Next we wished to determine whether this form of depression is input specic, that is, whether the reduction in synaptic efcacy was conned to the stimulated inputs only. To address this question, separate inputs to layer III were isolated by making a radial cut in the slice that extended from the white matter to layer IV, and baseline stimulation was applied in layer IV on each side of the cut. During CCh, PPS was applied to only one input, the other serving as an unstimulated control. The results, summarized in Figure 2 B, showed that only inputs receiving stimulation during CCh show the LTD (stimulated path, 82 6% of baseline; control path, 98 1%; n 5). Thus, cholinergic stimulation promotes LTD only in active inputs. The results described above indicate that CCh in conjunction with paired-pulse stimulation induces an activity-dependent and homosynaptic form of LTD. We were interested to know whether the CCh effect is specic to inputs receiving PPS or whether CCh exerts a more general facilitation of homosynaptic LTD mechanisms. In hippocampal and visual cortical slices, a homosynaptic form of LTD can also be reliably induced with low-frequency stimulation (L FS; typically 1 Hz), but only if this stimulation is

prolonged [usually 10 15 min (Dudek and Bear, 1992; Kirkwood et al., 1993)]. To see whether CCh can facilitate LFS-induced LTD, we combined application of the drug with brief epochs of LFS (1 Hz for 5 min; Fig. 3). When the brief LFS was applied alone, little or no LTD was induced (94 3%; n 11). However, when brief LFS was applied in conjunction with CCh, substantial LTD was induced (81 3; n 17; p 0.005; Fig. 3C). These results indicate that CCh application facilitates the induction of homosynaptic LTD with LFS, as well as with PPS.

Involvement of NMDA receptors and M1 receptors in the induction of synaptic depression in the presence of carbachol
The induction of one prominent form of homosynaptic LTD in visual cortex requires the activation of NMDA receptors (Kirkwood and Bear, 1994b). To test whether this is also the case for the synaptic depression promoted by CCh, we attempted to block its induction with the NMDA receptor antagonist 2-amino-5phosphonovaleric acid (AP5). Figure 4, AC, illustrates the effects of bath-applied 100 M AP5 on the induction of depression in CCh. In three cases, one of them shown in Figure 4 A, AP5 completely blocked LTD induced with the aid of CCh, and this

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Figure 2. Synaptic depression induced with CCh requires synaptic stimulation. A, Lef t, In the absence of stimulation, CCh failed to produce any signicant change in the FP responses. Right, Subsequently, depression was reliably produced when CCh was applied with PPS. In both panels the responses were normalized with respect to the average response during the initial baseline period before CCh application. The time that elapsed between the last data point on the lef t and the rst data point on the right varied but was not 30 min. B, The depression induced by CCh is input specic. Right, The stimulationrecording conguration used to assess input specicity is shown. Layer IV was stimulated on either side of a radial cut that extended from the white matter (WM ) through layer IV. Left, The graph shows that CCh application induces depression only on the side that was stimulated. In all experiments designed to test for input specicity, responses from the two inputs showed summation and were of similar amplitudes.

Figure 3. CCh promotes the induction of LTD with a L FS. A, Results from an experiment in which a brief epoch of L FS (300 pulses at 1 Hz; solid horizontal bar) failed to induce LTD under control conditions but did produce LTD when it was subsequently applied in the presence of CCh. The baseline was collected with single-pulse stimulation delivered every 15 sec. B, Changes in the FP amplitude induced by L FS alone (open circles; n 11) and by LFS in the presence of 50 M CCh ( lled circles; n 17). C, Cumulative probability distribution of the changes induced by L FS in the absence (dashed line) and in the presence (solid line) of CCh. The percentage change over the baseline was measured at 30 min after conditioning. Data are from the same experiments shown in B.

blockade was relieved after removal of AP5. On average, LTD induced by PPS in the presence of CCh was signicantly reduced but not eliminated by AP5 (AP5, 91 9%; n 12; control, 77 12; n 10; p 0.01; Fig. 4C). The data indicate that cholinergic activation promotes the induction of an NMDA receptordependent form of LTD. However, the fact that the inhibition of LTD with AP5 is incomplete suggests that an NMDA receptorindependent form of LTD may also be promoted by CCh. In this regard, it is worth mentioning that in the CA1 region it has been

demonstrated that two forms of LTD can be induced at the same synapses (Oliet et al., 1997). In adults, cholinergic terminals and muscarinic receptors are distributed throughout the depth of the visual cortex. Nicotinic receptors, in contrast, are conned to the middle layers. It seemed reasonable to assume, therefore, that the effects of CCh on layer III synaptic responses depend on the activation of muscarinic receptors. To test this assumption, we studied the effects of the muscarinic antagonist atropine on the synaptic depression in-

Kirkwood et al. Modulation of Visual Cortical Plasticity by ACh and NE

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Figure 4. Synaptic depression induced by PPS in CCh is partially dependent on NMDA receptor activation. A, Results are from one of the three experiments in which application of 100 M AP5 reversibly blocked the depression induced with CCh. B, On average, application of 100 M A P5 reduced the depression induced with CCh. The graph shows the effects of CCh on the rst response in the presence ( lled circles; n 10) and in the absence (open circles; n 12) of 100 M AP5. C, Cumulative probability distribution of the changes in the eld potential amplitude measured 30 min after washout of CCh is shown. E xperiments were done in the presence of A P5 (solid line) and in the absence of A P5 (dashed line). Data are from the same experiments shown in B.

duced with CCh. In the presence of 5 M atropine, the application of CCh failed to produce either the transient or the lasting depression of the eld responses (98 3.4% of baseline; n 6), whereas substantial depression was induced in the interleaved controls (87 2; n 7; Fig. 5A). A major postsynaptic muscarinic receptor type is the M1 receptor (Mrzljak et al., 1993; Wang and McCormick, 1993), and this receptor has been implicated in the regulation of visual cortical plasticity (Gu and Singer, 1993). As shown in Figure 5B, in the presence of the selective M1 antagonist pirenzepine (50 M), application of CCh failed to induce LTD [98 3% of baseline (n 10) as compared with 80 4% (n 10) in the interleaved controls]. In contrast, the M2 receptor antagonist gallamine (50 M) had no effect (79 3% of baseline 30 min after CCh; n 7; data not shown). Thus, facilitation of LTD by CCh depends, at least in part, on M1 receptor activation coincident with synaptic activation of NMDA receptors.

Norepinephrine induces a long-lasting depression of the synaptic responses


The suggestion has been made from lesion studies in vivo that ACh and N E might have similar modulatory effects on synaptic plasticity in visual cortex (Bear and Singer, 1986). Therefore, we investigated whether N E can also promote synaptic plasticity of layer III synaptic responses in visual cortical slices. In these experiments we used the same stimulation paradigms used in the CCh experiments. Figure 6, A and B, shows that application of 40 M NE for 10 min results in an acute reduction of the responses to PPS. The ratio of the second to the rst response, which was 0.90 0.05 (n 8) at the beginning of the experiments, grew to 0.98 0.06 during NE application and remained at that value (1.00 0.05) after the washout of N E. As was the case for CCh, when N E was removed the response to the rst pulse remained depressed for as long as the response was recorded (82 2% of control at 60 min after N E). Simultaneous intracellular and

Figure 5. Synaptic depression induced by CCh is dependent on the activation of M1 muscarinic receptors. A, Time course of the effects of CCh applied in the absence (open circles; n 6) and presence ( lled circles; n 7) of the muscarinic antagonist atropine (5 M). B, Time course of the effects of CCh applied in the absence (open circles; n 10) and presence ( lled circles; n 10) of the specic M1 muscarinic antagonist pirenzepine (50 M).

extracellular recordings revealed that NE reduced the EPSP (90 2%; n 11) and the eld potential (88 3%) to a similar extent and caused a slight and transient depolarization (Fig. 6C,D) that disappeared after washout of the drug. Thus, the

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Figure 6. PPS in the presence of NE induces a lasting depression of the layer III synaptic responses to layer IV stimulation. A, B, Effects of a brief (10 min) bath application of NE (40 M) on the eld responses evoked with paired-pulse stimulation (ISI 40 msec) are shown. A, FPs were recorded immediately before (control) and during the application of NE and 30 min after washout of the drug. B, Time course of the average of nine experiments is shown. Solid circles are responses to the rst pulse; open circles are responses to the second pulse. C, D, The effects of NE on FPs correlate with changes in simultaneously recorded intracellular EPSPs. C, Traces are averages of four consecutive intracellular (top) and extracellular (bottom) responses recorded before and 30 min after washout of NE. D, Average time course of 11 similar experiments is shown. Top, Changes in FP amplitude (open circles) and initial slope of the EPSP ( lled triangles) are presented. Bottom, Changes in the membrane potential are shown.

lasting depression of the eld responses induced with the aid of NE reects, at least in part, changes in synaptic efcacy.

Norepinephrine promotes an activity- and NMDA receptor-dependent form of LTD


The striking similarity of the long-term effects of CCh and NE led us to examine f urther whether LTD induced with the aid of NE also requires synaptic activity. In these experiments we stimulated and recorded simultaneously from two independent sites in the same slice (see Fig. 7). Stimulation at one site was suspended during the application of N E and resumed 5 min after washout of the drug; the other site was stimulated throughout the experiment and served as a control. As shown in Figure 7, very little depression developed in the nonstimulated site (99 3%; n 5), whereas robust depression was observed in the control site (83 6%). Next we investigated the involvement of NMDA receptors in the induction of LTD by PPS in the presence of N E, using the NMDA receptor antagonist AP5. As shown in Figure 8, in the presence of 100 M AP5, PPS in N E failed to induce LTD (103 3%; n 6), but it did induce substantial LTD after washout of the antagonist (84 3%; p 0.005). Taken together, these results support the conclusion that noradrenergic activation, like cholinergic activation, facilitates the induction of homosynaptic LTD in visual cortex.

1 receptors are involved in the noradrenergic facilitation of LTD


NE can activate a variety of adrenergic receptors in the supercial layers of visual cortex, including 1-, 2-, and -adrenergic

receptors. To determine the receptor subtype involved in the facilitation of LTD, we investigated the effect of a battery of receptor-specic antagonists and agonists. Figure 9, A and B, shows that -adrenergic receptors are unlikely to be involved in the facilitation of LTD. PPS in the presence of the -adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol (40 M) produced no LTD (97 4%; n 6), and application of the receptor antagonist propranolol (40 M) had no effect on the induction of LTD in the presence of NE (74 4%; n 5). These results contrast with the effects of 1 receptor agonists and antagonists (Fig. 9C, D). PPS during application of the 1 receptor agonist methoxamine (40 M) caused a sustained depression of the synaptic responses (84 3; n 8) that mimicked the LTD induced with NE (Fig. 9C). Moreover, the 1 antagonist urapidil (40 80 M) effectively blocked the effects of NE (98 3%; n 12) as compared with interleaved controls (85 2%; n 12; Fig. 9D). Together, these data indicate that 1, but not , receptors are involved in the facilitation of LTD by NE. The pharmacological manipulation of 2 receptors produced some perplexing results. The 2 agonist clonidine had the opposite effect of NE; PPS in clonidine produced a large, but transient, potentiation of the synaptic responses (130 8% at 20 min of clonidine application). After clonidine was removed, the responses slowly came back to control levels (103 3% at 50 min of washout; n 4; Fig. 9E). The 2 antagonist yohimbine (40 M) mimicked the effects of NE and profoundly reduced the eld responses. When the drug was removed, the responses recovered only partially, reaching a stably depressed level (70 4%; n 7;

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Figure 7. Synaptic depression induced with NE requires synaptic activity. Lef t, Time course of the changes induced by NE on the amplitude of the rst response in two sites recorded simultaneously in the same slices (n 5). One site was stimulated throughout the experiment (solid circles), whereas in the other site stimulation was suspended during NE application and resumed 5 min after washout (open circles). Right, Stimulusrecording arrangement.

Fig. 9F). The paradoxical results obtained with yohimbine and clonidine might be attributable, at least in part, to their effects on presynaptic 2 inhibitory autoreceptors. By blocking the autoreceptors, yohimbine might enhance the release of endogenous NE and facilitate the induction of LTD.

describe here may be useful for the further dissection of the molecular mechanism of experience-dependent cortical plasticity and its modulation by behavioral state.

Differential effects of neuromodulators in visual cortex and hippocampus


Previous studies indicate that synaptic plasticity evoked in visual cortical layer III and synaptic plasticity evoked in the CA1 region of the hippocampus share crucial similarities in their mechanism of induction (K irkwood et al., 1993). Therefore, it was of interest to investigate the effect of the neuromodulators on the CA1 synaptic responses. In these experiments, the responses to PPS were recorded simultaneously in visual cortex and hippocampus using slices that contained both structures (Fig. 10 A). During the CCh application, the CA1 responses were the most affected (Fig. 10 B). After removal of the drug, however, the responses in both visual cortex and hippocampus stabilized at a similar, depressed level (82 7% in visual cortex; 89 4% in CA1; n 8). On the other hand, whereas during the application of N E both CA1 and visual cortex were depressed to the same level (Fig. 10C), only the visual cortical responses remained depressed after the removal of the drug (82 3% in visual cortex; 103 6% in CA1; n 10).

Properties of LTD induced in the presence of ACh and NE


In recent years, it has become clear that many synapses in the CNS can undergo activity-dependent LTD. In the hippocampus and neocortex, LTD can be induced reliably with prolonged (e.g., 15 min), low-frequency (e.g., 1 Hz) synaptic stimulation. LTD induced in this way occurs only at the stimulated synapses and thus is said to be homosynaptic. In the CA1 region of hippocampus and in layer III of visual cortex, homosynaptic LTD evoked with LFS requires NMDA receptor activation under most experimental conditions (e.g., Dudek and Bear, 1992; Kirkwood et al., 1993). The properties of LTD in visual cortex induced by PPS in the presence of NE suggest that it uses a similar induction mechanism. In particular, the LTD is completely blocked by application of AP5, an NMDA receptor antagonist. Thus, NE may act as a sort of gain-control mechanism for NMDA receptor-dependent homosynaptic LTD. The situation for ACh, however, may be more complicated. Although the LTD induced by PPS in the presence of CCh was input specic, it was only partially blocked by AP5. Thus, in addition to facilitating NMDA receptordependent homosynaptic LTD, ACh may also promote other mechanisms of LTD induction. In this context, it should be noted that NMDA receptor-independent forms of homosynaptic LTD have been described, both in visual cortex (Artola et al., 1990) and in hippocampus, including area CA1 (Stanton and Sejnowski, 1989; Bolshakov and Siegelbaum, 1994; Oliet et al., 1997). With PPS, a brief application of NE or CCh resulted in LTD of magnitude comparable with that obtained with prolonged LFS, the standard method to induce LTD in many laboratories. However, PPS induced LTD with far fewer stimulation pulses (40 vs

DISCUSSION
The principal nding of our study is that cholinergic or noradrenergic receptor activation dramatically facilitates the induction of homosynaptic LTD in layer III of visual cortex. In fact, when PPS is used, the neuromodulators enable induction and expression of synaptic plasticity that otherwise would not be observed. Thus, our results provide strong support for the view that ACh and N E can serve as enabling factors for activity-dependent cortical plasticity (Singer, 1979, 1995; Dykes et al., 1990; Dykes, 1997). Because this robust modulation of plasticity can be observed under controlled conditions in vitro, the paradigm we

Figure 8. Synaptic depression induced with NE is reversibly blocked by the NMDA receptor antagonist A P5. Lef t, In the presence of A P5 (100 M), NE failed to produce any change in the FP response to test stimulation. Right, After washout of the drug, however, depression was reliably produced. In both panels the responses were normalized with respect to the average response during the initial baseline period before NE application. The time that elapsed between the last data point on the lef t and the rst data point on the right varied but was not 30 min.

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Figure 9. Noradrenergic facilitation of LTD is mediated by the activation of 1 receptors. A, The -adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol (40 M; ISO) fails to facilitate LTD. B, Application of the -adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol (40 M) does not block the facilitation of LTD by NE. C, The 1-adrenergic agonist methoxamine (40 M; METHOX ) mimics NE. D, The 1-adrenergic antagonist urapidil (40 M) blocks the effects of NE (open symbols, NE urapidil; lled symbols, N E controls). E, Bath application of the 2-adrenergic agonist clonidine (40 M) transiently potentiates the response to synaptic stimulation. F, Application of the 2-adrenergic antagonist yohimbine (40 M) depresses the synaptic responses.

900). PPS may be a particularly efcacious stimulation regime, in part because it facilitates NMDA receptor-mediated responses (Metherate and Ashe, 1994). However, the facilitation of LTD by the neuromodulators is not unique to PPS, because we nd that LFS-induced LTD is also enhanced. In this context it should be noted that Kojic et al. (1997) reported that another neuromodulator, serotonin, could also greatly facilitate L FS-induced LTD in visual cortex. The LTD induced by PPS in the presence of neuromodulators was associated with an increase in the paired-pulse response ratio. This effect was more pronounced for ACh than it was for NE. These ndings could be taken as support for a presynaptic expression mechanism for LTD in the neocortex (i.e., reduced probability of glutamate release in response to the rst pulse). However, interpretation of a change in paired-pulse responses in our preparation is not straightforward. The paired-pulse ratio depends importantly on the magnitude of the response to the rst pulse and on the state of inhibition (L uhmann and Prince, 1991; Metherate and Ashe, 1994; Frank et al., 1995). Thus, elucidation of the expression mechanism(s) for LTD in the neocortex will require additional experiments, using intracellular recordings of responses to minimal stimulation of a small number of synaptic inputs.

Mechanism of LTD facilitation in visual cortex


Our data suggest that the effect of CCh on LTD is mediated via muscarinic receptors of the M1 subtype and that the effect of NE is mediated via receptors of the 1 type. Both of these receptor types are highly expressed in the supercial layers of visual cortex (Shaw et al., 1986; Schliebs et al., 1989), and interestingly, both are coupled to phospholipase C. Although the exact site(s) of modulation and the precise mechanisms by which the modulation occurs remain to be determined, there are some obvious possibilities. The LTD triggered by PPS depends, at least in part, on NMDA receptor activation. Because the NMDA receptor is voltage dependent, cholinergic and noradrenergic modulation of LTD could occur indirectly by regulating the excitability of the postsynaptic neuron or by altering the properties of inhibition. In addition, the NMDA receptor itself is a phosphoprotein that is subject to regulation (Roche et al., 1994). Finally, regulation of LTD could occur downstream of NMDA receptor activation, for example, via release of Ca 2 from intracellular stores or by altering the activity of the protein kinases and phosphatases that control synaptic efcacy. Indeed, studies in neocortex and hippocampus have shown that activation of M1 (Valentino and Dingledine, 1981; Markram and Segal, 1990, 1992; Behrends and Buggencate, 1993; Murakoshi,

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effects could contribute to the modulation of LTD in visual cortex, and it will be of interest to investigate these possible mechanisms in future studies. It should be noted, however, that there is already evidence that decreasing inhibition can facilitate homosynaptic LTD in CA1 (Wagner and Alger, 1995).

Neuromodulators and bidirectional synaptic plasticity


To our knowledge, our study is the rst to show facilitation of LTD by ACh and NE. However, there have been many reports on the effects of ACh and NE on long-term potentiation (LTP). As is the case for LTD, there are multiple forms of LTP with different induction and expression mechanisms. One form, which is highly expressed in CA1 and in the supercial layers of neocortex (e.g., Kirkwood et al., 1993), depends on NMDA receptor activation for its induction. This type of LTP is of particular interest because it is the functional inverse of NMDA receptordependent LTD (for review, see Bear and Kirkwood, 1996). As we have shown for LTD, NMDA receptor-dependent LTP is enhanced by muscarinic receptor activation (Tanaka et al., 1989; Blitzer et al., 1990; Burgard and Sarvey, 1990; Brocher et al., 1992; Huerta and Lisman, 1993; Sokolov and Kleschevnikov, 1995). In fact, Auerbach and Segal (1994, 1996) report that low concentrations of CCh (0.25 0.75 M) can directly trigger LTP in CA1. We did not observe a similar effect in visual cortex, however. Similarly, NMDA receptor-dependent LTP is enhanced by NE. However, this facilitatory effect is mediated by receptors and not receptors as is the case for LTD (Stanton and Sarvey, 1987; Brocher et al., 1992; Kato, 1993; Thomas et al., 1996; Katsuki et al., 1997). Moreover, in CA1 10 M NE not only facilitates LTP but also inhibits induction of LTD with LFS (Blitzer et al., 1995; Thomas et al., 1996). The apparent discrepancy between the effects of NE on LTD in visual cortex and hippocampus could be explained by differences in the balance of and receptor activation by NE in the two preparations. Indeed, our direct comparison of hippocampus and visual cortex revealed that synaptic transmission in the two structures responds differently to bath-applied NE. Unlike in the visual cortex, there was no LTD induced in CA1 by PPS in the presence of NE.

Relevance to experience-dependent cortical plasticity


The stimulus selectivity of cortical neurons is subject to experience-dependent modication, and such changes are likely to reect the storage of information by cortical synapses. Theoretical studies have shown that synaptic modications with the properties of LTP and LTD are well suited to account for experience-dependent shifts in selectivity (Bienenstock et al., 1982; Bear et al., 1987; Bear, 1996). The striking facilitation by NE and ACh of both LTP and LTD suggests that these modulators could function generally as a gain-control mechanism for the synaptic plasticity that underlies receptive eld plasticity and learning. Indeed, the notion that cortical synaptic plasticity is somehow gated by ACh and NE has received abundant support from studies performed in vivo on visual, auditory, and somatosensory cortex (Kasamatsu and Pettigrew, 1979; Bear and Singer, 1986; Gordon et al., 1990; Juliano et al., 1991; Kasamatsu, 1991; Gu and Singer, 1993; Edeline et al., 1994; Baskerville et al., 1997; Dykes, 1997; Kilgard and Merzenich, 1998; Zhu and Waite, 1998). Although plasticity is an important feature of adult cortical organization, it is clearly most robust during early postnatal development. A classic example of developmental plasticity in the

Figure 10. Differential effects of CCh and NE in hippocampus and visual cortex. A, The drawing depicts the electrode conguration used for simultaneous recording in CA1 and visual cortex. B, Application of CCh yields comparable LTD in CA1 and visual cortex. Top, The traces are averages of four consecutive recordings taken before (thick line), during (dotted line), and 30 min after the application of CCh (thin line). Bottom, The graph shows the time course of the changes induced in the rst response recorded simultaneously in the CA1 region of the hippocampus (initial slope of the eld potential; open circles) and in the visual cortex (eld potential amplitude; lled circles). C, The time course of the changes induced by bath application of NE is shown. PPS in the presence of NE failed to produce LTD in the hippocampus.

1995; K imura and Baughman, 1997) and 1 receptors (Madison and Nicoll, 1988) reduces evoked GABA release by inhibitory interneurons. In addition, M1 receptor activation increases the excitability of pyramidal neurons (McCormick and Prince, 1986; Dutar and Nicoll, 1988) and directly enhances NMDA receptor function (Segal, 1992; Aramakis et al., 1997). Any or all of these

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visual cortex is the loss of responsiveness to stimulation of an eye that has been briey deprived of vision. Like other forms of cortical plasticity, the deprivation-induced synaptic depression is disrupted by lesions that interrupt cholinergic and noradrenergic inputs to cortex (Bear and Singer, 1986; Gordon et al., 1990). Interestingly, although partial destruction of each input alone was insufcient to produce a detectable loss of deprivation-induced synaptic depression, their combined destruction did disrupt this form of plasticity. This nding led to the suggestion that the two inputs might be able to substitute for one another in the control of cortical plasticity. Our discovery that ACh and N E produce a qualitatively similar facilitation of LTD is entirely consistent with this idea. Thus, the study of LTD and its modulation may provide new insights into the mechanisms of experience-dependent synaptic plasticity in the neocortex.

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