Synaptic Plasticity Flashcards

1
Q

what is synaptic plasticity? why is it important?

A
  • Synaptic plasticity refers to increases or decreases in synaptic strength in response to patterns of synaptic activity
  • this is essential for LTP and LTP - essential for learning and memory
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2
Q

why is the second PSP greater than the first one? (synaptic facilitiation)

A
  • Synaptic vesicle release is Ca2+ dependent

- Higher levels of Ca2+ -> more vesicle fusion -> more transmitters released

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3
Q

why does synaptic facilitation decrease as interval increases?

A

facilitiation decreases with time because Ca2+ levels recover to normal

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4
Q

what is synaptic depression and why does it occur?

A
  • decrease post-synaptic potential
  • due to depletion of synaptic vesicle pool
  • finite pool of synaptic vesicles with NTs so continuous stimulation -> depletion thus Its decreased as well
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5
Q

what is the difference b/w LTP and LTD?

A
1. Receptor involved 
LTP - NMDA + AMPA 
LTD - AMPA 
2. stimulus 
LTP - HFS
LTD - LFS
3. Ca2+ involved (increased)
LTP - large + fast 
LTD - small + slow 
4. phosphates 
LTP - kinases (P addition)
LTD - phosphates (P removal) 
5. synapses 
LTP - mainly pre-synaptic 
LTD - mainly post-synaptic
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6
Q

name few diseases in which synaptic plasticity is involved and affected

A
  1. AD - atrophy of hippocampus thus affecting the LTD + LTP
  2. kindling in epilepsy - prolonged LTP -> seizures
  3. Drug addiction - VTA-NAc synapse - repeated LTD exposure thus higher doses required to stay high
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