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Homeostatic Shrinkage of Dendritic Spines Requires Melatonin Type 3 Receptor Activation During Sleep. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - High-frequency brain activity during wakefulness leads to the growth of dendritic spines and axonal terminals, which are important for cognitive functions, but their excess presence can be problematic if they don't form effective connections.
  • - Sleep plays a key role in pruning unnecessary neural structures to maintain brain health, but the specific processes involved in this pruning are not well understood.
  • - The study shows that melatonin type 3 receptors (MTRs) in the medial entorhinal cortex activate during sleep to shrink dendritic spines, which is essential for learning spatial memory; disrupting this process can hinder spatial memory acquisition without affecting the memory for objects.

Article Abstract

High-frequency oscillatory activity in cognition-related neural circuits during wakefulness consistently induces the growth of dendritic spines and axonal terminals. Although these structural changes are essential for cognitive functions, it is hypothesized that if these newly expanded structures fail to establish functional connections, they may become superfluous. Sleep is believed to facilitate the reduction of such redundant structures to maintain neural homeostasis. However, the mechanisms underlying this pruning process during sleep remain poorly understood. In this study, that melatonin type 3 receptors (MTRs) are selectively expressed in the stellate neurons of the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) is demonstrated, an area where high melatonin levels are detected during sleep. Activation of MTRs during sleep initiates the shrinkage of dendritic spines in stellate neurons by downregulating neural network activity and dephosphorylating synaptic proteins in the MEC. This process is disrupted when MTR expression is knocked down or when MTRs are blocked during sleep. Notably, interference with MTRs in the MEC during sleep impairs the acquisition of spatial memory but does not affect object memory acquisition following sleep. These findings reveal novel molecular mechanisms involving melatonin and MTRs in the regulation of dendritic spine shrinkage during sleep, which is crucial for the acquisition and consolidation of spatial memory.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11481193PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202400253DOI Listing

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