AI Article Synopsis

  • Mammalian neurons have complex structures with branched dendrites and long axons, allowing for intricate neural connections.
  • Synapses are numerous and often too distant from the cell body to receive new proteins quickly, presenting a challenge for maintaining synaptic strength and number.
  • Local protein synthesis in the axon and presynaptic terminals is critical for synaptic plasticity, and issues with this process are linked to various nervous system disorders.

Article Abstract

To form and maintain extremely intricate and functional neural circuitry, mammalian neurons are typically endowed with highly arborized dendrites and a long axon. The synapses that link neurons to neurons or to other cells are numerous and often too remote for the cell body to make and deliver new proteins to the right place in time. Moreover, synapses undergo continuous activity-dependent changes in their number and strength, establishing the basis of neural plasticity. The innate dilemma is then how a highly complex neuron provides new proteins for its cytoplasmic periphery and individual synapses to support synaptic plasticity. Here, we review a growing body of evidence that local protein synthesis in discrete sites of the axon and presynaptic terminals plays crucial roles in synaptic plasticity, and that deregulation of this local translation system is implicated in various pathologies of the nervous system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pneurobio.2021.102051DOI Listing

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