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ARTICLE |
Cellular/Molecular
Lipid Rafts and Synaptic Signaling
Ligand-Dependent Recruitment of the ErbB4 Signaling Complex into
Neuronal Lipid Rafts
Li Ma, Yang Z. Huang, Graham M. Pitcher, Juli G. Valtschanoff,
Ying H. Ma, Lin Y. Feng, Bai Lu, Wen C. Xiong, Michael W. Salter, Richard J. Weinberg, and Lin Mei (see pages 3164-3175)
Lipid Rafts in the Maintenance of Synapses, Dendritic Spines, and
Surface AMPA Receptor Stability
Heike Hering, Chih-Chun Lin, and Morgan Sheng (see pages 3262-3271)
Lipid rafts are plasma membrane microdomains enriched in
cholesterol and sphingolipids. A host of signaling molecules has been
found recently to congregate within rafts through various post-translational modifications. In this issue, two reports provide new insights into lipid raft functions at neuronal synapses. Ma et al.
focus on signaling by neuregulin (NRG), a regulator of synapse
formation and plasticity. Neuronal stimulation with NRG recruited its
receptor ErbB4 (localized at postsynaptic densities) to the lipid
rafts. Disruption of the rafts (through cholesterol sequestration)
resulted in the loss of downstream effects of NRG, including Erk
activation and NRG-dependent blockade of long-term potentiation. Work
by Hering et al. found that the lipid rafts could be separated into
distinct components. Several postsynaptic proteins were localized to
rafts, including glutamate receptors and their associated proteins.
Raft depletion (achieved by disrupting cholesterol and sphingolipid
synthesis) led to a loss of stability of AMPA receptors, dendritic
spines, and ultimately synapses. In raft-depleted neurons, spine and
synapse density was reduced, but the remaining spines were enlarged,
perhaps to compensate for the loss. These observations contribute to
the growing evidence for a role of lipid rafts as an organizing element
in cell signaling, structural integrity, and synaptic communication.
Development/Plasticity/Repair
Premature Death of Subplate Neurons
Selective Vulnerability of Subplate Neurons after Early Neonatal
Hypoxia-Ischemia
Patrick S. McQuillen, R. Ann Sheldon, Carla J. Shatz, and Donna
M. Ferriero (see pages 3308-3315)
Hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) injury during development causes specific
types of brain damage and neuronal death. In humans, preterm H-I
(thought to be caused by immaturity of the cerebral vasculature) results in damage to subcortical white matter [so-called
periventricular leukomalacia (PVL)]. Such babies have abnormal
neuronal development and often devastating long-term brain damage. In
this issue, McQuillen et al. used a rat model of neonatal H-I to
determine whether subplate neurons, a transient cell type sensitive to
stage-specific excitotoxicity, are selectively destroyed. As in PVL,
H-I in rats (caused by permanent right carotid occlusion on postnatal
day 1 or day 2) caused subcortical neuronal death as well as motor
deficits. Subplate neurons were indeed killed by H-I, as shown by
specific loss of bromodeoxyuridine-labeled neurons. Although subplate
neurons are required for the normal development of cortical
connections, their premature death in H-I followed the formation of
normal thalamocortical connections. Although oligodendrocyte progenitor
cells, another transient neuronal cell type with stage-sensitive
vulnerability, have been considered a primary victim in developmental
H-I, these results suggest that subplate neuronal loss may also
contribute to abnormal neuronal development. For example, loss of
subplate neurons could prevent the development of mature ocular
dominance columns after PVL.
Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive
0
Surround Inhibition in Time and Space
Imaging Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Surround Inhibition in the
Barrels Somatosensory Cortex
Dori Derdikman, Rina Hildesheim, Ehud Ahissar, Amos Arieli, and
Amiram Grinvald (see pages 3100-3105)
Derdikman et al. selected some of the latest generation of
voltage-sensitive dyes to hone in on the spatial and temporal
properties of sensory processing in the whisker barrel system of the
rat somatosensory cortex. The sensitivity of selected dyes allowed the
authors to examine the membrane voltage of many cortical neurons with
high resolution, and in real time, after stimulation of single whiskers
and the whisker pad. In agreement with previous studies using other
methods, the neurons displayed a triphasic pattern. An initial
depolarization began in the area of a single cortical barrel but then
spread in an asymmetrical oval pattern along rows of the barrel. The
third phase consisted of a rebound hyperpolarization associated with 16 Hz oscillations. These experiments illustrate that voltage-sensitive
dyes may be particularly useful tools to examine the spatial dynamics
of signal processing in small neuronal networks.

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Cortical activation maps of the rat somatosensory cortex
evoked by mechanical stimulation of a whisker. Times of each frame are
indicated in milliseconds. This image is taken from Figure 2 of this
article.
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