Neuron
Volume 80, Issue 5, 4 December 2013, Pages 1301-1309
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Article
Spike-Timing-Dependent Plasticity in Primate Corticospinal Connections Induced during Free Behavior

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.08.028Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Activity-dependent stimuli in spinal cord induced STDP in corticospinal terminals

  • Bidirectional STDP was documented at the single neuron level

  • A head-fixed recurrent neural interface produced STDP during free behavior

Summary

Motor learning and functional recovery from brain damage involve changes in the strength of synaptic connections between neurons. Relevant in vivo evidence on the underlying cellular mechanisms remains limited and indirect. We found that the strength of neural connections between motor cortex and spinal cord in monkeys can be modified with an autonomous recurrent neural interface that delivers electrical stimuli in the spinal cord triggered by action potentials of corticospinal cells during free behavior. The activity-dependent stimulation modified the strength of the terminal connections of single corticomotoneuronal cells, consistent with a bidirectional spike-timing-dependent plasticity rule previously derived from in vitro experiments. For some cells, the changes lasted for days after the end of conditioning, but most effects eventually reverted to preconditioning levels. These results provide direct evidence of corticospinal synaptic plasticity in vivo at the level of single neurons induced by normal firing patterns during free behavior.

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