Literature DB >> 21525283

Protein kinase M maintains long-term sensitization and long-term facilitation in aplysia.

Diancai Cai1, Kaycey Pearce, Shanping Chen, David L Glanzman.   

Abstract

How the brain maintains long-term memories is one of the major outstanding questions in modern neuroscience. Evidence from mammalian studies indicates that activity of a protein kinase C (PKC) isoform, protein kinase Mζ (PKMζ), plays a critical role in the maintenance of long-term memory. But the range of memories whose persistence depends on PKMζ, and the mechanisms that underlie the effect of PKMζ on long-term memory, remain obscure. Recently, a PKM isoform, known as PKM Apl III, was cloned from the nervous system of Aplysia. Here, we tested whether PKM Apl III plays a critical role in long-term memory maintenance in Aplysia. Intrahemocoel injections of the pseudosubstrate inhibitory peptide ZIP (ζ inhibitory peptide) or the PKC inhibitor chelerythrine erased the memory for long-term sensitization (LTS) of the siphon-withdrawal reflex (SWR) as late as 7 d after training. In addition, both PKM inhibitors disrupted the maintenance of long-term (≥ 24 h) facilitation (LTF) of the sensorimotor synapse, a form of synaptic plasticity previously shown to mediate LTS of the SWR. Together with previous results (Bougie et al., 2009), our results support the idea that long-term memory in Aplysia is maintained via a positive-feedback loop involving PKM Apl III-dependent protein phosphorylation. The present data extend the known role of PKM in memory maintenance to a simple and well studied type of long-term learning. Furthermore, the demonstration that PKM activity underlies the persistence of LTF of the Aplysia sensorimotor synapse, a form of synaptic plasticity amenable to rigorous cellular and molecular analyses, should facilitate efforts to understand how PKM activity maintains memory.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21525283      PMCID: PMC3102530          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4744-10.2011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  59 in total

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4.  Long-term memory in Aplysia modulates the total number of varicosities of single identified sensory neurons.

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  47 in total

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Review 5.  Nonassociative learning in invertebrates.

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6.  Reconsolidation of Long-Term Memory in Aplysia.

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8.  Anterograde and retrograde signaling by an Aplysia neurotrophin forms a transsynaptic functional unit.

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Review 9.  The role of serotonin in memory: interactions with neurotransmitters and downstream signaling.

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