AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies indicate a significant connection between mRNA translation, synaptic plasticity, and memory, highlighting distinct early and late phases of synaptic changes.
  • In experiments with GCN2(-/-) mice, a unique synaptic response was observed in the CA1 area of the hippocampus, showcasing enhanced L-LTP after single stimulation yet impaired responses to multiple trains, linking GCN2 to translation processes.
  • The altered behavior of GCN2(-/-) mice in spatial memory tests suggests that GCN2's regulatory role affects learning and memory through the interplay between ATF4 and CREB proteins in the hippocampus.

Article Abstract

Studies on various forms of synaptic plasticity have shown a link between messenger RNA translation, learning and memory. Like memory, synaptic plasticity includes an early phase that depends on modification of pre-existing proteins, and a late phase that requires transcription and synthesis of new proteins. Activation of postsynaptic targets seems to trigger the transcription of plasticity-related genes. The new mRNAs are either translated in the soma or transported to synapses before translation. GCN2, a key protein kinase, regulates the initiation of translation. Here we report a unique feature of hippocampal slices from GCN2(-/-) mice: in CA1, a single 100-Hz train induces a strong and sustained long-term potentiation (late LTP or L-LTP), which is dependent on transcription and translation. In contrast, stimulation that elicits L-LTP in wild-type slices, such as four 100-Hz trains or forskolin, fails to evoke L-LTP in GCN2(-/-) slices. This aberrant synaptic plasticity is mirrored in the behaviour of GCN2(-/-) mice in the Morris water maze: after weak training, their spatial memory is enhanced, but it is impaired after more intense training. Activated GCN2 stimulates mRNA translation of ATF4, an antagonist of cyclic-AMP-response-element-binding protein (CREB). Thus, in the hippocampus of GCN2(-/-) mice, the expression of ATF4 is reduced and CREB activity is increased. Our study provides genetic, physiological, behavioural and molecular evidence that GCN2 regulates synaptic plasticity, as well as learning and memory, through modulation of the ATF4/CREB pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1464117PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature03897DOI Listing

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