Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2042953 Current Biology 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryBrain networks memorize previous performance to adjust their output in light of past experience. These activity-dependent modifications generally result from changes in synaptic strengths or ionic conductances, and ion pumps have only rarely been demonstrated to play a dynamic role [1, 2, 3 and 4]. Locomotor behavior is produced by central pattern generator (CPG) networks and modified by sensory and descending signals to allow for changes in movement frequency, intensity, and duration [5, 6 and 7], but whether or how the CPG networks recall recent activity is largely unknown. In Xenopus frog tadpoles, swim bout duration correlates linearly with interswim interval, suggesting that the locomotor network retains a short-term memory of previous output. We discovered an ultraslow, minute-long afterhyperpolarization (usAHP) in network neurons following locomotor episodes. The usAHP is mediated by an activity- and sodium spike-dependent enhancement of electrogenic Na+/K+ pump function. By integrating spike frequency over time and linking the membrane potential of spinal neurons to network performance, the usAHP plays a dynamic role in short-term motor memory. Because Na+/K+ pumps are ubiquitously expressed in neurons of all animals and because sodium spikes inevitably accompany network activity, the usAHP may represent a phylogenetically conserved but largely overlooked mechanism for short-term memory of neural network function.

► Swim bout duration in Xenopus tadpoles correlates with interswim interval ► A postswim, ultraslow afterhyperpolarization (usAHP) follows motor network activity ► Spinal neuron firing increases Na+/K+ pump function to generate the usAHP ► The usAHP functions as a short-term memory of motor network output

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