scholarly journals Long-term plasticity of inhibitory synapses in the hippocampus and spatial learning depends on matrix metalloproteinase 3

Author(s):  
Grzegorz Wiera ◽  
Katarzyna Lebida ◽  
Anna Maria Lech ◽  
Patrycja Brzdąk ◽  
Inge Van Hove ◽  
...  

Abstract Learning and memory are known to depend on synaptic plasticity. Whereas the involvement of plastic changes at excitatory synapses is well established, plasticity mechanisms at inhibitory synapses only start to be discovered. Extracellular proteolysis is known to be a key factor in glutamatergic plasticity but nothing is known about its role at GABAergic synapses. We reveal that pharmacological inhibition of MMP3 activity or genetic knockout of the Mmp3 gene abolishes induction of postsynaptic iLTP. Moreover, the application of exogenous active MMP3 mimics major iLTP manifestations: increased mIPSCs amplitude, enlargement of synaptic gephyrin clusters, and a decrease in the diffusion coefficient of synaptic GABAA receptors that favors their entrapment within the synapse. Finally, we found that MMP3 deficient mice show faster spatial learning in Morris water maze and enhanced contextual fear conditioning. We conclude that MMP3 plays a key role in iLTP mechanisms and in the behaviors that presumably in part depend on GABAergic plasticity.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yandong Yi ◽  
Yuanlong Song ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Yisheng Lu

Abstract Recent studies have shown exercise is effective for adult hippocampus neurogenesis and memory. However, the molecular mechanism of exercise is unclear. In this study, AG1478, an ErbB4 inhibitor, was used to explore the involvement of ErbB4 receptors. Four weeks post-running, cognitive impairment was analyzed using T-maze, Morris water maze (MWM) and contextual fear discrimination learning tests, followed by histological assessment of the proliferation and survival of hippocampal neurons using Ki67, NeuN and BrdU immunostaining respectively. Expression of total and phosphate ErbB4 protein level was evaluated by Western blotting. The results showed that AG1478 significantly impaired the performances in T-maze and MWM (spatial learning and memory), contextual fear conditioning and discrimination learning paradigm (non-spatial working and reference memory), enhanced neurogenesis loss, downregulated the expression of p-ErbB4 and total ErbB4 protein, which could be reversed by running. Taken together, our study suggested that running ameliorates cognitive impairment and neurogenesis via ErbB4 signaling.


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (273) ◽  
pp. ec94-ec94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy R. Gough

The cellular model of memory is a synaptic plasticity event called long-term potentiation (LTP). LTP can be divided into two phases: The early phase (E-LTP) lasts less than 2 hours and does not require new protein synthesis, and the late phase (L-LTP) can last many hours and requires new protein synthesis. Translation of mRNAs is regulated through various mechanisms, one of which is the binding of poly(A)-binding protein (PABP) to the poly(A) tail of the target mRNA. PAIP2A and PAIP2B (PAIP-interacting protein 2A and 2B) inhibit translation by interfering with PABP function. Khoutorsky et al. found that degradation of PAIP2A, which is the form that is abundant in the brain, linked synaptic activity to enhanced translation and contributed to learning and memory in mice. Hippocampal slices from Paip2a–/– mice showed L-LTP in response to a stimulus that only triggered E-LTP in slices from wild-type mice and showed impaired L-LTP in response to a stimulus that triggered L-LTP in slices from wild-type mice. Consistent with these electrophysiological studies, behavorial memory tests indicated that Paip2a–/– mice showed faster learning in spatial long-term memory tests in response to weak training but showed impaired learning in response to a long-term contextual fear conditioning test that used a strong training paradigm. Experiments with cultured neurons and hippocampal slices showed an activity-dependent decrease in the abundance of PAIP2A that could be prevented by pharmacological inhibition of the calcium-dependent proteases calpains. The calpain-dependent reduction in PAIP2A was also detected in mice subjected to the contextual fear conditioning paradigm, and infusion of calpain inhibitors impaired long-term contextual fear memory. Increased production of calcium-calmodulin kinase IIα (CaMKIIα) occurs in response to synaptic activity and is necessary for learning. The abundance of CaMKIIα in the hippocampus was increased in Paip2a–/– mice trained in a contextual fear conditioning paradigm compared with untrained mice or wild-type trained mice. This increase in CaMKIIα resulted from increased translation because CaMKIIα mRNA was shifted to heavy polysome fractions in the brains of Paip2a–/– trained mice and the association of PABP with this mRNA was greatest in the Paip2a–/– trained mice. Thus, activity-dependent degradation of a translation inhibitor contributes to the enhanced translation needed for learning and memory.A. Khoutorsky, A, Yanagiya, C. G. Gkogkas, M. R. Fabian, M. Prager-Khoutorsky, R. Cao, K. Gamache, F. Bouthiette, A. Parsyan, R. E. Sorge, J. S. Mogil, K. Nader, J.-C. Lacaille, N. Sonenberg, Control of synaptic plasticity and memory via suppression of poly(A)-binding protein. Neuron78, 298–311 (2013). [Online Journal]


2004 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 1077-1087 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Nian Liu ◽  
Tohru Kurotani ◽  
Ming Ren ◽  
Kazumasa Yamada ◽  
Yumiko Yoshimura ◽  
...  

We have shown that some neural activity is required for the maintenance of long-term potentiation (LTP) at visual cortical inhibitory synapses. We tested whether this was also the case in N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor–independent LTP of excitatory connections in layer 2/3 cells of developing rat visual cortex. This LTP occurred after 2-Hz stimulation was applied for 15 min and always persisted for several hours while test stimulation was continued at 0.1 Hz. When test stimulation was stopped for 1 h after LTP induction, only one-third of the LTP instances disappeared, but most did disappear under a pharmacological suppression of spontaneous firing, indicating that LTP maintenance requires either evoked or spontaneous activities. LTP was totally abolished by a temporary blockade of action potentials with lidocaine or the removal of extracellular Ca2+ after LTP induction, but it persisted under a voltage clamp of postsynaptic cells or after a temporary blockade of postsynaptic activity with the glutamate receptor antagonist kynurenate, suggesting that LTP maintenance requires presynaptic, but not postsynaptic, firing and Ca2+ entry. More than one-half of the LTP instances were abolished after a pharmacological blockade of P-type Ca2+ channels, whereas it persisted after either L-type or Ni2+-sensitive Ca2+ channel blockades. These results show that the maintenance of NMDA receptor–independent excitatory LTP requires presynaptic firing and Ca2+ channel activation as inhibitory LTP, although the necessary level of firing and Ca2+ entry seems lower for the former than the latter and the Ca2+ channel types involved are only partly the same.


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