AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looks at how nerve cells in the brain change their connections when they get damaged.
  • Researchers used two different setups of nerve cells to see how their activity changed when the strong connections between them got weaker.
  • They found that at first, the connections got stronger before they started to weaken, and they think this is because of a special process in the brain that helps it adapt and stay resilient.

Article Abstract

An elusive phenomenon in network neuroscience is the extent of neuronal activity remodeling upon damage. Here, we investigate the action of gradual synaptic blockade on the effective connectivity in cortical networks in vitro. We use two neuronal cultures configurations-one formed by about 130 neuronal aggregates and another one formed by about 600 individual neurons-and monitor their spontaneous activity upon progressive weakening of excitatory connectivity. We report that the effective connectivity in all cultures exhibits a first phase of transient strengthening followed by a second phase of steady deterioration. We quantify these phases by measuring G, the global efficiency in processing network information. We term the sudden strengthening of G upon network deterioration, which increases by 20-50% depending on culture type. Relying on numerical simulations we reveal the role of , an activity-dependent mechanism for synaptic plasticity, in counteracting the perturbative action, neatly reproducing the observed hyperefficiency. Our results demonstrate the importance of synaptic scaling as resilience mechanism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7781611PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/netn_a_00156DOI Listing

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