Homeostatic plasticity is a form of plasticity in which neurons compensate for changes in neuronal activity through the control of key physiological parameters such as the number and the strength of their synaptic inputs and intrinsic excitability. Recent studies revealed that miRNAs, which are small non-coding RNAs repressing mRNA translation, participate in this process by controlling the translation of multiple effectors such as glutamate transporters, receptors, signaling molecules and voltage-gated ion channels. In this review, we present and discuss the role of miRNAs in both cell-wide and compartmentalized forms of homeostatic plasticity as well as their implication in pathological processes associated with homeostatic failure.
Homeostatic synaptic plasticity is a process by which neurons adjust their synaptic strength to compensate for perturbations in neuronal activity. Whether the highly diverse synapses on a neuron respond uniformly to the same perturbation remains unclear. Moreover, the molecular determinants that underlie synapse‐specific homeostatic synaptic plasticity are unknown. Here, we report a synaptic tagging mechanism in which the ability of individual synapses to increase their strength in response to activity deprivation depends on the local expression of the spine‐apparatus protein synaptopodin under the regulation of miR‐124. Using genetic manipulations to alter synaptopodin expression or regulation by miR‐124, we show that synaptopodin behaves as a “postsynaptic tag” whose translation is derepressed in a subpopulation of synapses and allows for nonuniform homeostatic strengthening and synaptic AMPA receptor stabilization. By genetically silencing individual connections in pairs of neurons, we demonstrate that this process operates in an input‐specific manner. Overall, our study shifts the current view that homeostatic synaptic plasticity affects all synapses uniformly to a more complex paradigm where the ability of individual synapses to undergo homeostatic changes depends on their own functional and biochemical state.
Homeostatic synaptic plasticity (HSP) is a process by which neurons adjust synaptic strengths to compensate for various perturbations and which allows to stabilize neuronal activity. Yet, whether the highly diverse synapses harboring a neuron respond uniformly to a same perturbation is unclear and the underlying molecular determinants remain to be identified. Here, using patch-clamp recordings, immunolabeling and imaging approaches, we report that the ability of individual synapses to undergo HSP in response to activity-deprivation paradigms depends on the local expression of the spine apparatus related protein synaptopodin (SP) acting as a synaptic tag to promote AMPA receptor synaptic accumulation and spine growth. Gain and loss-of-function experiments indicate that this process relies on the local de-repression of SP translation by miR124 which supports both non-uniform and synapse-autonomous HSP induced by global or input-specific activity deprivation, respectively. Our findings uncover an unexpected synaptic-tagging mechanism for HSP, whose molecular actors are intriguingly shared with Hebbian plasticity and linked to multiple neurological diseases.
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