Cortical HFS-Induced Neo-Hebbian Local Plasticity Enhances Efferent Output Signal and Strengthens Afferent Input Connectivity

Xiao Li* (Co-first Author), Xue Wang (Co-first Author), Xiaohan Hu (Co-first Author), Peng Tang, Congping Chen, Ling He, Mengying Chen, Stephen Temitayo Bello, Tao Chen, Xiaoyu Wang, Yin Ting Wong, Wenjian Sun, Xi Chen, Jianan Qu, Jufang He

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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Abstract

High-frequency stimulation (HFS)-induced long–term potentiation (LTP) is generally regarded as a homosynaptic Hebbian-type LTP, where synaptic changes are thought to occur at the synapses that project from the stimulation site and terminate onto the neurons at the recording site. In this study, we first investigated HFS-induced LTP on urethane-anesthetized rats and found that cortical HFS enhances neural responses at the recording site through the strengthening of local connectivity with nearby neurons at the stimulation site rather than through synaptic strengthening at the recording site. This enhanced local connectivity at the stimulation site leads to increased output propagation, resulting in signal potentiation at the recording site. Additionally, we discovered that HFS can also non-specifically strengthen distant afferent synapses at the HFS site, thereby expanding its impact beyond local neural connections. This form of plasticity exhibits a neo-Hebbian characteristic as it exclusively manifests in the presence of cholecystokinin release, induced by HFS. The cortical HFS-induced local LTP was further supported by a behavioral task, providing additional evidence. Our results unveil a previously overlooked mechanism underlying cortical plasticity: synaptic plasticity is more likely to occur around the soma site of strongly activated cortical neurons rather than solely at their projection terminals. © 2025, Society for Neuroscience. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
JournaleNeuro
Volume12
Issue number2
Online published14 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2025

Funding

This work was supported by Hong Kong Research Grants Council, General Research Fund, 11101215M, 11103220M, 11101818M, 11102417M, and 11101521M (J.H.);

Research Keywords

  • auditory cortex
  • cholecystokinin
  • high-frequency stimulation
  • interhemispheric cortical pathway
  • long-term potentiation
  • neo-Hebbian plasticity
  • recurrent excitation

Publisher's Copyright Statement

  • This full text is made available under CC-BY 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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