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  4. The Relationship between PSD-95 Clustering and Spine Stability In Vivo
 
research article

The Relationship between PSD-95 Clustering and Spine Stability In Vivo

Cane, Michele
•
Maco, Bohumil  
•
Knott, Graham  orcid-logo
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2014
The Journal of neuroscience

The appearance and disappearance of dendritic spines, accompanied by synapse formation and elimination may underlie the experience-dependent reorganization of cortical circuits. The exact temporal relationship between spine and synapse formation in vivo remains unclear, as does the extent to which synapse formation enhances the stability of newly formed spines and whether transient spines produce synapses. We used in utero electroporation of DsRedExpress- and eGFP-tagged postsynaptic density protein 95 (PSD-95) to investigate the relationship between spine and PSD stability in mouse neocortical L2/3 pyramidal cells in vivo. Similar to previous studies, spines and synapses appeared and disappeared, even in naive animals. Cytosolic spine volumes and PSD-95-eGFP levels in spines covaried over time, suggesting that the strength of many individual synapses continuously changes in the adult neocortex. The minority of newly formed spines acquired PSD-95-eGFP puncta. Spines that failed to acquire a PSD rarely survived for more than a day. Although PSD-95-eGFP accumulation was associated with increased spine lifetimes, most new spines with a PSD did not convert into persistent spines. This indicates that transient spines may serve to produce short-lived synaptic contacts. Persistent spines that were destined to disappear showed, on average, reduced PSD-95-eGFP levels well before the actual pruning event. Altogether, our data indicate that the PSD size relates to spine stability in vivo.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1523/Jneurosci.3353-13.2014
Web of Science ID

WOS:000331455200007

Author(s)
Cane, Michele
Maco, Bohumil  
Knott, Graham  orcid-logo
Holtmaat, Anthony
Date Issued

2014

Publisher

Soc Neuroscience

Published in
The Journal of neuroscience
Volume

34

Issue

6

Start page

2075

End page

2086

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CVLAB  
CIME  
Available on Infoscience
April 2, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/102407
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