Castillo Pablo E, Schoch Susanne, Schmitz Frank, Südhof Thomas C, Malenka Robert C
Nancy Friend Pritzker Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94304, USA.
Nature. 2002 Jan 17;415(6869):327-30. doi: 10.1038/415327a.
Two main forms of long-term potentiation (LTP)-a prominent model for the cellular mechanism of learning and memory-have been distinguished in the mammalian brain. One requires activation of postsynaptic NMDA (N-methyl d-aspartate) receptors, whereas the other, called mossy fibre LTP, has a principal presynaptic component. Mossy fibre LTP is expressed in hippocampal mossy fibre synapses, cerebellar parallel fibre synapses and corticothalamic synapses, where it apparently operates by a mechanism that requires activation of protein kinase A. Thus, presynaptic substrates of protein kinase A are probably essential in mediating this form of long-term synaptic plasticity. Studies of knockout mice have shown that the synaptic vesicle protein Rab3A is required for mossy fibre LTP, but the protein kinase A substrates rabphilin, synapsin I and synapsin II are dispensable. Here we report that mossy fibre LTP in the hippocampus and the cerebellum is abolished in mice lacking RIM1alpha, an active zone protein that binds to Rab3A and that is also a protein kinase A substrate. Our results indicate that the long-term increase in neurotransmitter release during mossy fibre LTP may be mediated by a unitary mechanism that involves the GTP-dependent interaction of Rab3A with RIM1alpha at the interface of synaptic vesicles and the active zone.
长期增强作用(LTP)——学习和记忆细胞机制的一个重要模型——在哺乳动物大脑中已被区分出两种主要形式。一种需要激活突触后N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体,而另一种称为苔藓纤维LTP,其主要成分是突触前成分。苔藓纤维LTP在海马苔藓纤维突触、小脑平行纤维突触和皮质丘脑突触中表达,其作用机制显然需要蛋白激酶A的激活。因此,蛋白激酶A的突触前底物可能是介导这种形式的长期突触可塑性所必需的。对基因敲除小鼠的研究表明,苔藓纤维LTP需要突触小泡蛋白Rab3A,但蛋白激酶A底物rabphilin、突触结合蛋白I和突触结合蛋白II并非必需。我们在此报告,缺乏RIM1α(一种与Rab3A结合的活性区蛋白,也是蛋白激酶A的底物)的小鼠海马和小脑中的苔藓纤维LTP消失。我们的结果表明,苔藓纤维LTP期间神经递质释放的长期增加可能由一种单一机制介导,该机制涉及Rab3A与RIM1α在突触小泡和活性区界面处的GTP依赖性相互作用。