Summary of ssbd-repos-000289

SSBD:repository
SSBD:repository URL
DOI
Title
Imaging data in the paper, "Activity-dependent local protection and lateral inhibition mediate synaptic competition in developing mitral cells" (Fujimoto et al., 2023).
Description

Neuronal morphology data of mitral cells in the mouse olfactory bulb and Layer 4 neurons in the barrel cortex; Calcium imaging data of olfactory sensory neurons and mitral cells; and FRET imaging data of mitral cells.

Submited Date
2023-04-10
Release Date
2023-06-07
Updated Date
-
License
Data size
752.0 GB
Data formats
lif, oib, oif

Organism
Mus musculus
Strain
-
Cell Line
-
Molecular Function (MF)
-
Biological Process (BP)
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Cellular Component (CC)
-
Study Type
-
Imaging Methods
-

Method Summary
-
Related paper(s)

Satoshi Fujimoto, Marcus N Leiwe, Shuhei Aihara, Richi Sakaguchi, Yuko Muroyama, Reiko Kobayakawa, Ko Kobayakawa, Tetsuichiro Saito, Takeshi Imai (2023) Activity-dependent local protection and lateral inhibition control synaptic competition in developing mitral cells in mice., Developmental cell

Published in June 7, 2023 (Electronic publication in May 30, 2023, midnight )

(Abstract) In developing brains, activity-dependent remodeling facilitates the formation of precise neuronal connectivity. Synaptic competition is known to facilitate synapse elimination; however, it has remained unknown how different synapses compete with one another within a post-synaptic cell. Here, we investigate how a mitral cell in the mouse olfactory bulb prunes all but one primary dendrite during the developmental remodeling process. We find that spontaneous activity generated within the olfactory bulb is essential. We show that strong glutamatergic inputs to one dendrite trigger branch-specific changes in RhoA activity to facilitate the pruning of the remaining dendrites: NMDAR-dependent local signals suppress RhoA to protect it from pruning; however, the subsequent neuronal depolarization induces neuron-wide activation of RhoA to prune non-protected dendrites. NMDAR-RhoA signals are also essential for the synaptic competition in the mouse barrel cortex. Our results demonstrate a general principle whereby activity-dependent lateral inhibition across synapses establishes a discrete receptive field of a neuron.

Contact(s)
Takeshi Imai
Organization(s)
Kyushu Univerisity
Image Data Contributors
Satoshi Fujimoto, Marcus Leiwe, Shuhei Aihara
Quantitative Data Contributors

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