MIT neuroscientists have discovered that the adult brain contains millions of “silent synapses” — immature connections between neurons that remain inactive until they’re recruited to help form new memories.
Until now, it was believed that silent
synapses were present only during early development, when they help the brain
learn the new information that it’s exposed to early in life. However, the new MIT study revealed that in adult mice, about 30 percent of all synapses in
the brain’s cortex are silent.
The existence of these silent synapses
may help to explain how the adult brain is able to continually form new
memories and learn new things without having to modify existing conventional
synapses, the researchers say.
“These silent synapses are looking for
new connections, and when important new information is presented, connections
between the relevant neurons are strengthened. This lets the brain create new
memories without overwriting the important memories stored in mature synapses,
which are harder to change,” says Dimitra Vardalaki, an MIT graduate student
and the lead author of the new study.
Mark Harnett, an associate professor of
brain and cognitive sciences and a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain
Research, is the senior author of the paper, which appears today in Nature. Kwanghun Chung, an associate professor of
chemical engineering at MIT, is also an author.
A surprising discovery
When scientists first discovered silent
synapses decades ago, they were seen primarily in the brains of young mice and
other animals. During early development, these synapses are believed to help
the brain acquire the massive amounts of information that babies need to learn
about their environment and how to interact with it. In mice, these synapses
were believed to disappear by about 12 days of age (equivalent to the first
months of human life).
However, some neuroscientists have
proposed that silent synapses may persist into adulthood and help with the
formation of new memories. Evidence for this has been seen in animal models of
addiction, which is thought to be largely a disorder of aberrant learning.
Theoretical work in the field from
Stefano Fusi and Larry Abbott of Columbia University has also proposed that
neurons must display a wide range of different plasticity mechanisms to explain
how brains can both efficiently learn new things and retain them in long-term
memory. In this scenario, some synapses must be established or modified easily,
to form the new memories, while others must remain much more stable, to
preserve long-term memories.
In the new study, the MIT team did not
set out specifically to look for silent synapses. Instead, they were following
up on an intriguing finding from a previous study in Harnett’s lab. In that paper, the
researchers showed that within a single neuron, dendrites — antenna-like
extensions that protrude from neurons — can process synaptic input in different
ways, depending on their location.
As part of that study, the researchers
tried to measure neurotransmitter receptors in different dendritic branches, to
see if that would help to account for the differences in their behavior. To do
that, they used a technique called eMAP (epitope-preserving Magnified Analysis
of the Proteome), developed by Chung. Using this technique, researchers can
physically expand a tissue sample and then label specific proteins in the
sample, making it possible to obtain super-high-resolution images.
While they were doing that imaging, they
made a surprising discovery. “The first thing we saw, which was super bizarre
and we didn’t expect, was that there were filopodia everywhere,” Harnett says.
Filopodia, thin membrane protrusions
that extend from dendrites, have been seen before, but neuroscientists didn’t
know exactly what they do. That’s partly because filopodia are so tiny that
they are difficult to see using traditional imaging techniques.
After making this observation, the MIT
team set out to try to find filopodia in other parts of the adult brain, using
the eMAP technique. To their surprise, they found filopodia in the mouse visual
cortex and other parts of the brain, at a level 10 times higher than previously
seen. They also found that filopodia had neurotransmitter receptors called NMDA
receptors, but no AMPA receptors.
A typical active synapse has both of
these types of receptors, which bind the neurotransmitter glutamate. NMDA
receptors normally require cooperation with AMPA receptors to pass signals
because NMDA receptors are blocked by magnesium ions at the normal resting
potential of neurons. Thus, when AMPA receptors are not present, synapses that
have only NMDA receptors cannot pass along an electric current and are referred
to as “silent.”
Unsilencing
synapses
To investigate whether these filopodia
might be silent synapses, the researchers used a modified version of an
experimental technique known as patch clamping. This allowed them to monitor
the electrical activity generated at individual filopodia as they tried to
stimulate them by mimicking the release of the neurotransmitter glutamate from
a neighboring neuron.
Using this technique, the researchers
found that glutamate would not generate any electrical signal in the filopodium
receiving the input, unless the NMDA receptors were experimentally unblocked.
This offers strong support for the theory the filopodia represent silent
synapses within the brain, the researchers say.
The researchers also showed that they
could “unsilence” these synapses by combining glutamate release with an
electrical current coming from the body of the neuron. This combined
stimulation leads to accumulation of AMPA receptors in the silent synapse,
allowing it to form a strong connection with the nearby axon that is releasing
glutamate.
The researchers found that converting
silent synapses into active synapses was much easier than altering mature
synapses.
“If you start with an already functional
synapse, that plasticity protocol doesn’t work,” Harnett says. “The synapses in
the adult brain have a much higher threshold, presumably because you want those
memories to be pretty resilient. You don’t want them constantly being
overwritten. Filopodia, on the other hand, can be captured to form new
memories.”
“Flexible
and robust”
The findings offer support for the
theory proposed by Abbott and Fusi that the adult brain includes highly plastic
synapses that can be recruited to form new memories, the researchers say.
“This paper is, as far as I know, the
first real evidence that this is how it actually works in a mammalian brain,”
Harnett says. “Filopodia allow a memory system to be both flexible and robust.
You need flexibility to acquire new information, but you also need stability to
retain the important information.”
The researchers are now looking for
evidence of these silent synapses in human brain tissue. They also hope to
study whether the number or function of these synapses is affected by factors
such as aging or neurodegenerative disease.
“It’s entirely possible that by changing the amount of flexibility you’ve got in a memory system, it could become much harder to change your behaviors and habits or incorporate new information,” Harnett says. “You could also imagine finding some of the molecular players that are involved in filopodia and trying to manipulate some of those things to try to restore flexible memory as we age.”
Source: https://news.mit.edu/2022/silent-synapses-brain-1130
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05483-6
Source: Silent
synapses are abundant in the adult brain – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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