AI Article Synopsis

  • Social memory plays a crucial role in the functioning of social animals, and estrogens like 17β-estradiol (E2) can quickly enhance short-term social memory and support synapse formation.
  • The study tested the roles of ERK and PI3K signaling pathways in E2's rapid effects by using inhibitors in mice before E2 infusion during social memory tasks.
  • Results showed that while ERK and PI3K are both necessary for E2's enhancement of social memory and synapse formation, only ERK is required for synapse elimination, highlighting estrogen's complex influence on brain function and social behavior.

Article Abstract

Social memory is essential to the functioning of a social animal within a group. Estrogens can affect social memory too quickly for classical genomic mechanisms. Previously, 17β-estradiol (E2) rapidly facilitated short-term social memory and increased nascent synapse formation, these synapses being potentiated following neuronal activity. However, what mechanisms underlie and coordinate the rapid facilitation of social memory and synaptogenesis are unclear. Here, the necessity of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling for rapid facilitation of short-term social memory and synaptogenesis was tested. Mice performed a short-term social memory task or were used as task-naïve controls. ERK and PI3K pathway inhibitors were infused intradorsal hippocampally 5 min before E2 infusion. Forty minutes following intrahippocampal E2 or vehicle administration, tissues were collected for quantification of glutamatergic synapse number in the CA1. Dorsal hippocampal E2 rapid facilitation of short-term social memory depended upon ERK and PI3K pathways. E2 increased glutamatergic synapse number (bassoon puncta positive for GluA1) in task-performing mice but decreased synapse number in task-naïve mice. Critically, ERK signaling was required for synapse formation/elimination in task-performing and task-naïve mice, whereas PI3K inhibition blocked synapse formation only in task-performing mice. While ERK and PI3K are both required for E2 facilitation of short-term social memory and synapse formation, only ERK is required for synapse elimination. This demonstrates previously unknown, bidirectional, rapid actions of E2 on brain and behavior and underscores the importance of estrogen signaling in the brain to social behavior.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10400940PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2300191120DOI Listing

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