Exploiting volume electron microscopy to investigate structural plasticity and stability of the postsynaptic compartment of central synapses

Front Cell Neurosci. 2023 Mar 24:17:1153593. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2023.1153593. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Volume reconstruction from electron microscopy datasets is a tool increasingly used to study the ultrastructure of the synapse in the broader context of neuronal network and brain organization. Fine modifications of synapse structure, such as activity-dependent dendritic spine enlargement and changes in the size and shape of the postsynaptic density, occur upon maturation and plasticity. The lack of structural plasticity or the inability to stabilize potentiated synapses are associated with synaptic and neuronal functional impairment. Mapping these rearrangements with the high resolution of electron microscopy proved to be essential in order to establish precise correlations between the geometry of synapses and their functional states. In this review we discuss recent discoveries on the substructure of the postsynaptic compartment of central excitatory synapses and how those are correlated with functional states of the neuronal network. The added value of volume electron microscopy analyses with respect to conventional transmission electron microscopy studies is highlighted considering that some limitations of volume-based methods imposed several adjustments to describe the geometry of this synaptic compartment and new parameters-that are good indicators of synapses strength and activity-have been introduced.

Keywords: axon-spine interface; dendritic spine enlargement; postsynaptic density (PSD); structural plasticity; synapse; synaptic apposition surface; synaptic stability; volume electron microscopy (vEM).

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The fees associated with the publication of this review are charged to the Italian PRIN 2017, grant number 20172C9HLW to MF.