Sodium imaging of climbing fiber innervation fields in developing mouse Purkinje cells

Bibiana Scelfo, Piergiorgio Strata, Thomas Knöpfel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

32 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Maturation of specific neuronal connections in the mature nervous system includes elimination of redundant synapses formed earlier during development. In the cerebellum of adult animals, each Purkinje cell (PC) is innervated by a single climbing fiber (CF). In early postnatal development each PC is innervated by multiple CFs and elimination of synapses formed by supernumerary CFs occurs until monoinnervation is established at around postnatal day 20 (P20) in mice. It is not clear whether multiple CFs, or only a single CF, translocate from the cell body of immature PCs to the developing dendrite and, in case several CFs translocate, whether they share or segregate their innervation fields. To localize CF innervation fields, we imaged changes in postsynaptic sodium concentration resulting from CF-mediated postsynaptic currents. We found that more than one CF translocates from an innervation field on the cell body of the PC to the developing dendrite and that these CFs share rather than segregate their innervation fields. We concluded that both the soma and the proximal dendrite of the PC are territories of competition for the developing CFs and that the overlapping of their termination fields may be the prerequisite for a local process of elimination of all but one CF, as previously demonstrated in the developing neuromuscular junction.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2555-2563
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Neurophysiology
Volume89
Issue number5
Early online date29 Jan 2003
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2003

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