Young Jennie Z, Isiegas Carolina, Abel Ted, Nguyen Peter V
Centre for Neuroscience, Univeristy of Alberta School of Medicine, 7-14 Medical Sciences Building, Edmonton, Albert T6G 2H7, Canada.
Eur J Neurosci. 2006 Apr;23(7):1784-94. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2006.04707.x.
The late-phase of long-term potentiation (L-LTP) in hippocampal area CA1 requires gene expression and de novo protein synthesis but it is expressed in an input-specific manner. The 'synaptic tag' theory proposes that gene products can only be captured and utilized at synapses that have been 'tagged' by previous activity. The mechanisms underlying synaptic tagging, and its activity dependence, are largely undefined. Previously, we reported that low-frequency stimulation (LFS) decreases the stability of L-LTP in a cell-wide manner by impairing synaptic tagging. We show here that a phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, blocked homosynaptic and heterosynaptic inhibition of L-LTP by prior LFS. In addition, prior LFS homosynaptically and heterosynaptically impaired chemically induced synaptic facilitation elicited by forskolin/3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, suggesting that there is a cell-wide dampening of cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) signaling concurrent with phosphatase activation. We propose that prior LFS impairs expression of L-LTP by inhibiting synaptic tagging through its actions on the cAMP/PKA pathway. In support of this notion, we show that hippocampal slices from transgenic mice that have genetically reduced hippocampal PKA activity display impaired synaptic capture of L-LTP. An inhibitor of PKA, KT-5720, also blocked synaptic capture of L-LTP. Moreover, pharmacological activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway can produce a synaptic tag to capture L-LTP expression, resulting in persistent synaptic facilitation. Collectively, our results show that PKA is critical for synaptic tagging and for input-specific L-LTP. PKA-mediated signaling can be constrained by prior episodes of synaptic activity to regulate subsequent L-LTP expression and perhaps control the integration of multiple synaptic events over time.
海马体CA1区的长期增强效应晚期(L-LTP)需要基因表达和从头合成蛋白质,但其以输入特异性方式表达。“突触标记”理论提出,基因产物只能在先前活动已“标记”的突触处被捕获和利用。突触标记的潜在机制及其活动依赖性在很大程度上尚不清楚。此前,我们报道低频刺激(LFS)通过损害突触标记在全细胞范围内降低L-LTP的稳定性。我们在此表明,磷酸酶抑制剂冈田酸可阻断先前LFS对L-LTP的同突触和异突触抑制。此外,先前的LFS在同突触和异突触水平上损害了由福斯可林/3-异丁基-1-甲基黄嘌呤诱导的化学性突触易化,这表明在磷酸酶激活的同时,全细胞范围内的环磷酸腺苷/蛋白激酶A(PKA)信号传导受到抑制。我们提出,先前的LFS通过其对环磷酸腺苷/PKA途径的作用抑制突触标记,从而损害L-LTP的表达。为支持这一观点,我们表明,来自基因改造后海马体PKA活性降低的转基因小鼠的海马切片显示L-LTP的突触捕获受损。PKA抑制剂KT-5720也可阻断L-LTP的突触捕获。此外,环磷酸腺苷/PKA途径的药理学激活可产生一个突触标记以捕获L-LTP表达,从而导致持续性突触易化。总体而言,我们的结果表明PKA对突触标记和输入特异性L-LTP至关重要。PKA介导的信号传导可受到先前突触活动事件的限制,以调节后续的L-LTP表达,并可能随着时间的推移控制多个突触事件的整合。