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Volume 16, Number 10,
Issue of May 15, 1996
pp. 3189-3198
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
A Macromolecular Synthesis-Dependent Late Phase of Long-Term
Potentiation Requiring cAMP in the Medial Perforant Pathway of Rat
Hippocampal Slices
Peter V. Nguyen and
Eric R. Kandel
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Center for Neurobiology and
Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University,
New York, New York 10032
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Memory storage consists of a short-term phase that is independent
of new protein synthesis and a long-term phase that requires the
synthesis of new proteins and RNA. A cellular representation of these
two phases has been demonstrated recently for long-term potentiation
(LTP) in both the Schaffer collateral and the mossy fibers of the
hippocampus, a structure widely thought to contribute to memory
consolidation. By contrast, much less information is available about
the medial perforant pathway (MPP), one of the major inputs to the
hippocampus. We found that both a short-lasting and a long-lasting
potentiation (L-LTP) can be induced in the MPP of rat hippocampal
slices by applying repeated tetanization in reduced levels of
magnesium. This potentiation was dependent on the activation of NMDA
receptors. The early, transient phase of LTP in the MPP did not require
either protein or RNA synthesis, and it was independent of protein
kinase A activation. By contrast, L-LTP required the synthesis of
proteins and RNA, and was selectively blocked by inhibitors of
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). Forskolin, an adenylate cyclase
activator, also induced a L-LTP that was attenuated by inhibition of
transcription. Our results demonstrate that, like LTP in the Schaffer
collateral and mossy fiber pathways, MPP LTP also consists of a late
phase that is dependent on protein and RNA synthesis and PKA activity.
Thus, cAMP-mediated transcription appears to be a common mechanism for
the late form of LTP in all three pathways within the hippocampus.
Key words:
LTP;
hippocampus;
synaptic plasticity;
gene expression;
cAMP;
protein kinase A
INTRODUCTION
Cognitive psychological studies indicate that
memory has stages and is commonly divided into at least two distinct
temporal phases: short-term memory, which lasts for minutes to hours,
and long-term memory, which can persist for days, weeks, or even longer
(for review, see Polster et al., 1991 ). A transient application of
inhibitors of mRNA and protein synthesis selectively blocks induction
of long-term memory without affecting short-term memory (Davis and
Squire, 1984 ; Castellucci et al., 1989 ; Crow and Forrester, 1990 ; Tully
et al., 1994 ). In contrast to its induction, the maintenance of
long-term memory, once established, does not require macromolecular
synthesis (Davis and Squire, 1984 ). Molecular studies of memory storage
for implicit and explicit forms of memory suggest that in both cases
the consolidation, or switch, from short-term to long-term memory
involves the induction of genes and proteins.
Studies of the transition from short-term to long-term memory in
invertebrates have provided evidence that the switch can be defined on
the molecular level. In the marine snail, Aplysia, studies
of memory for sensitization of the gill- and siphon-withdrawal reflexes
have revealed mechanistic differences at the cellular level. The
connections between the sensory and motor cells show a distinction
between short-term and long-term retention of presynaptic facilitation
(a mechanism contributing to sensitization). The short-term enhancement
of synaptic strength occurs by means of post-translational modification
of preexisting proteins and is mediated by both cAMP-dependent protein
kinase (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC) (Castellucci et al., 1980 ;
Montarolo et al., 1986 ; Ghirardi et al., 1992 ; Byrne et al., 1993 ). The
long-term process requires new protein synthesis and cAMP-mediated gene
expression through the activation of CREB-1 and the relief from
repression of CREB-2 (Montarolo et al., 1986 ; Dash et al., 1990 ;
Alberini et al., 1994 ; Bartsch et al., 1995 ) and leads to the growth of
new synaptic connections (Glanzman et al., 1990 ; Nazif et al., 1991 ).
Similarly, studies of Drosophila indicate that learning and
short-term memory require PKA and that long-term memory requires gene
expression initiated by CREB (Tully et al., 1994 ; Yin et al.,
1994 ).
Recent experiments suggest that similar mechanisms may be involved in
explicit memory storage in the mammalian brain. Explicit forms of
learning involve the acquisition of information about people, places,
and things, and are critically dependent on structures within the
temporal lobe, including the hippocampus. Within the hippocampus, there
are three prominent serial synaptic pathways and several minor ones
(Andersen et al., 1971 ; Amaral, 1993 ). Input to the hippocampus
originates from neurons of the entorhinal cortex by way of the
perforant pathway (lateral and medial), which synapses onto granule
cells of the dentate gyrus. The granule cells send their axons (the
mossy fibers) to synapse on pyramidal cells of area CA3. Finally, CA3
pyramidal cells send their axons (the Schaffer collaterals) to other
pyramidal cells in area CA1. Damage to any one of these three serial
pathways is thought to be sufficient to produce some memory impairment
in humans (Zola-Morgan et al., 1986 ).
Hippocampal neurons are known to undergo long-lasting increases in
synaptic strength after brief, high-frequency stimulation of any one of
the three major pathways (Bliss and Lømo, 1973 ) (for review, see Bliss
and Collingridge, 1993 ). In freely moving animals, the
activity-dependent increase in synaptic strength can last for hours or
even days, and is called long-term potentiation (LTP).
LTP has been most extensively studied in hippocampal slices (Andersen
et al., 1977 ). These studies have revealed important differences in the
induction mechanisms for LTP in the three pathways (for review, see
Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ). As with behavioral memory, LTP in the
CA1 and CA3 regions consists of two biochemically distinct temporal
phases. There is an early phase, lasting 1-3 hr, that is independent
of protein and RNA synthesis, and a later, more persistent phase that
requires new protein and RNA synthesis and is mediated by cAMP (Frey et
al., 1993 ; Matthies and Reymann, 1993 ; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Huang et
al., 1994 ; Nguyen et al., 1994 ).
Is there also a late phase of LTP in the perforant pathway of
hippocampal slices? Would such a late phase also require the
participation of cAMP, the synthesis of proteins, and the induction of
genes? Unlike LTP in the mossy fiber and Schaffer collateral pathways,
LTP in the perforant pathway has been studied mostly in anesthetized or
freely moving animals. Relatively fewer studies have examined LTP in
the perforant pathway in acute hippocampal slices (for exceptions, see
Hanse and Gustafsson, 1992a ,b, 1994; Colino and Malenka, 1993), and
these studies have not addressed later stages (>1 hr after induction)
or explored the possible involvement of protein synthesis and gene
induction in these phases (but for in vivo data see Krug et
al., 1984 ; Cole et al., 1989 ; Otani et al., 1989 ; Qian et al.,
1993 ).
In the present study, we have examined the medial perforant pathway
(MPP) in rat hippocampal slices and have found that a long-lasting
potentiation (L-LTP) of synaptic transmission can be induced by
repeated, strong tetanization of this pathway in the presence of
lowered extracellular magnesium. This L-LTP was selectively blocked by
inhibitors of protein and RNA synthesis, whereas an early, transient
phase of LTP remained unaffected by these same inhibitors. We also
found that inhibition of PKA blocks the later phase of LTP, without
affecting the early phase. Our results, taken together with the data
from areas CA1 and CA3 of the hippocampus and from Aplysia
(Frey et al., 1993 ; Alberini et al., 1994 ; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ;
Huang et al., 1994 ; Nguyen et al., 1994 ), support the notion that
common mechanisms of long-term synaptic facilitation, involving cAMP
and the synthesis of new proteins and mRNA, may underlie cellular
representations of the conversion of short-term to long-term memory for
several different forms of learning in both vertebrates and
invertebrates.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Transversely cut hippocampal slices (400 µM thickness) were prepared from
Sprague-Dawley rats (35-45 d old) using conventional procedures and
were maintained in an interface chamber at 28°C. Slices were
continuously superfused at 1 ml/min with a solution bubbled with
carboxygen (95% O2/5%
CO2) and containing (in
mM): 124 NaCl, 1.3 MgSO4,
4.4 KCl, 26 NaHCO3, 2.5 CaCl2, 1 NaH2PO4, and 10 glucose.
Slices were allowed to recover for 90 min before recordings were
attempted. For extracellular stimulation of the MPP, a bipolar
nickel-chromium electrode was placed in the middle molecular layer of
the dentate gyrus (Hjorth-Simonsen and Jeune, 1972 ; Steward, 1976 ;
McNaughton and Barnes, 1977 ). Extracellular field EPSPs were recorded
with a glass microelectrode (4-7 M resistance) filled with
perfusate and situated in the middle molecular layer of the dentate
gyrus. Medial pathway responses were confirmed on the basis of
depression of field EPSPs elicited with paired pulses spaced 40-100
msec apart (McNaughton, 1980 ). Slices that showed maximum field EPSP
sizes of <3 mV were rejected. For LTP experiments, the stimulation
intensity was adjusted to give baseline field EPSP slopes ~40% of
maximal evoked slopes. Test stimuli (0.05 msec pulse width) were
delivered at 0.02 Hz before tetanization. LTP was induced using 3 or 10 trains of 100 Hz (1 sec duration) delivered once/min. The stimulus
strength during tetanization was increased by doubling the pulse width
to 0.1 msec. Picrotoxin was not used, and lowered (0.7 mM) MgSO4 was present in
all experiments, unless otherwise indicated. All drugs were made fresh
in perfusate, except for forskolin (0.1% DMSO final concentration),
actinomycin-D (0.05% ethanol final concentration), and KT-5720 (0.1%
DMSO final concentration). Control baseline experiments for forskolin
and actinomycin-D (ACT-D) were carried out in the presence of perfusate
with 0.1% DMSO (for forskolin and KT-5720) or 0.05% ethanol (for
ACT-D). Student's unpaired t test was used for statistical
comparisons of mean field EPSP slopes in all experiments.
RESULTS
Repeated strong tetanization in lowered magnesium induces L-LTP in
the MPP
As an initial step toward determining what conditions would be
successful for inducing L-LTP in the MPP, we tried eliciting LTP in the
presence of 50 µM picrotoxin, a
GABAA antagonist. A previous study had shown that
in the absence of pharmacological disinhibition (by picrotoxin), little
potentiation could be reliably induced in the perforant pathway
(Wigström and Gustafsson, 1983a ,b). With just two 100 Hz trains
of test strength (spaced 20 sec apart), we were able, in the presence
of picrotoxin, to induce LTP that lasted for 3 hr. However, sample
field EPSP sweeps showed multiple evoked afterdischarges (Fig.
1A) at all times during LTP maintenance. Such
epileptiform activity was unsatisfactory for our experiments, which
were aimed at testing for a critical requirement for translation and
transcription in expression of L-LTP. Because macromolecular synthesis
can be modulated and activated by electrical activity in neurons, the
continual epileptiform afterdischarges seen with picrotoxin ruled out
further use of this potent GABA antagonist.
Fig. 1.
Repeated tetanization induces short- or
long-lasting potentiation (L-LTP) in the MPP. A, In the
continual presence of 50 µM picrotoxin, two 100 Hz trains (20 sec apart) elicited L-LTP but also induced repetitive
afterdischarges after evoked field EPSPs. Sample traces were recorded
from a slice at times indicated. Calibration bars: 2 mV, 4 msec.
B, Short-lasting potentiation was induced by three 100 Hz
trains applied once every minute (at twice test pulse width) starting
at ``0 min'' on the graph. With this protocol, the level of
facilitation decayed to <125% of baseline 60-90 min after
tetanization. With six trains of 100 Hz stimulation, a longer-lasting
potentiation was induced that, although persistent, was variable in
magnitude: 3 of 7 slices tested showed <50% facilitation 60 min after
tetanization. In both protocols, normal calcium and 50% of normal
magnesium levels were present in the saline. C, Ten 100 Hz
trains induced a robust and persistent potentiation of MPP field EPSPs
when applied in 50% Mg saline (filled circles; n = 11). In contrast, the same protocol elicited only a moderate level of
facilitation in normal Mg saline (lower curve, open
symbols). The levels of potentiation in normal Mg were
significantly lower than those in the reduced Mg saline, beginning 20 min after tetanization and extending to 130 min after tetanization, and
averaged only 122% of pretetanus baseline. Sample field EPSP traces
were recorded 10 min before and 2 hr after tetanization. Calibration
bars: 2 mV, 4 msec. D, Sample field EPSP traces measured
from a slice that had been tetanized in reduced Mg saline showed robust
potentiation and no repetitive afterdischarges (compare with
A). Calibration bars: 2 mV, 4 msec.
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
LTP in the MPP of rat hippocampal slices is dependent on NMDA receptor
activation (Hanse and Gustafsson, 1992b ; Colino and Malenka, 1993). We
therefore decided to reduce the saline level of magnesium to 50% of
normal values and apply varying numbers of 100 Hz trains (1 sec
duration, twice test strength) to the MPP.
In the presence of reduced magnesium, three 100 Hz trains (delivered
once/min) elicited a short-lasting potentiation that decayed after 70 min to 128 ± 4% of pretetanus baseline (Fig. 1B;
n = 7). Three hours after tetanization, the level of
potentiation was 116 ± 7% of baseline. By contrast, six 100 Hz
trains, under the same conditions, induced a slightly more robust LTP
that was significantly different in magnitude from that elicited by
three trains (Fig. 1B; p < 0.05 for time points
90 min after tetanization). However, there was greater variability in
the magnitude of the potentiation seen with six trains: 3 of 7 slices
tested failed to maintain the level of potentiation above 150% of
pretetanus baseline for the 3 hr duration of these experiments. We
therefore sought an even stronger induction protocol to reliably induce
a robust potentiation that would persist for 3 hr.
Using the same ionic conditions (50% Mg, normal calcium), we next
applied 10 trains of stimulation to the MPP (twice test strength,
delivered once/min). We found that this protocol induced a very robust
and stable form of LTP that persisted for at least 3 hr after
tetanization. The mean levels of potentiation recorded 1, 2, and 3 hr
after tetanization were 175 ± 11, 170 ± 12, and 158 ± 15% of
pretetanus baseline, respectively (Fig. 1C; n = 11). In some slices, this potentiation lasted 7 hr (P. Nguyen,
unpublished observations). In contrast, the level of facilitation
induced by 10 trains in the presence of normal magnesium and calcium
levels was 123 ± 14, 121 ± 15, and 139 ± 17% after 1, 2, and 3 hr,
respectively (Fig. 1C; p < 0.02 for 1 and 2 hr
values). Hence, the 10 train induction protocol in lowered magnesium
proved to be the most reliable for inducing a stable and robust form of
L-LTP in the MPP. Examination of sample field EPSP sweeps recorded
during LTP maintenance (Fig. 1D) showed further that this 10 train regimen did not elicit epileptiform discharges in any of the 11 slices tested. Thus, we decided to use this induction regimen for the
remainder of our experiments on L-LTP in the MPP.
LTP in the MPP is NMDA receptor-dependent
Previous studies on LTP in the MPP of hippocampal slices have
shown that NMDA receptor activation is necessary for induction of LTP
(Hanse and Gustafson, 1992b; Colino and Malenka, 1993). Those studies
used picrotoxin and an induction regimen different from ours; hence, we
tested whether the form of LTP induced by our present protocol (ten 100 Hz trains in reduced magnesium) also was NMDA receptor-dependent.
In the presence of the NMDA receptor antagonist
2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV; 100 µM),
no potentiation was induced by ten 100 Hz trains in reduced magnesium
levels (Fig. 2; p < 0.01 for comparisons
with control untreated slices). Thus, the form of LTP that we have
elicited with 10 trains of stimulation in reduced magnesium is
dependent on NMDA receptor activation.
Fig. 2.
MPP LTP induced by repeated tetanization is
dependent on NMDA receptor activation. The NMDA receptor antagonist APV
(100 µM) blocked potentiation when applied for
30 min beginning 20 min before the start of tetanization. The first
recorded response after tetanus was obtained 1 min after the last of
ten 100 Hz trains (delivered once/min at twice test pulse width);
hence, no post-tetanic potentiation was observed. All experiments were
performed using saline containing 50% of normal Mg levels.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Protein synthesis is critical for expression of the late, but not
the early, phase of LTP in the MPP
Previous studies on the expression of L-LTP in the CA1 (Frey et
al., 1991; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ) and CA3 regions (Huang et al., 1994 )
of the hippocampus have demonstrated a requirement for new protein
synthesis. Also, experiments on in vivo LTP in the dentate
gyrus have also shown that maintenance of LTP requires new protein
synthesis (Krug et al., 1984 ; Otani et al., 1989 ; Fazeli et al., 1993 ).
In our present experiments, we decided to test whether protein
synthesis was critical for L-LTP expression in the MPP of hippocampal
slices. We found that a 40 min exposure (beginning 15 min before
tetanization) to 25 µM of the protein synthesis
inhibitor emetine significantly attenuated LTP beginning 80 min after
tetanization. The level of potentiation was then 127 ± 10% of
baseline in drug-treated slices compared with 170 ± 12% in untreated
controls (Fig. 3A1; p < 0.02). At
all subsequent times (later than 80 min after tetanization), the levels
of potentiation in emetine-treated slices were significantly lower
(p < 0.01) than the levels attained in control slices (Fig.
3A1). In contrast to the attenuation of L-LTP induced by 10 trains of stimulation, emetine had no effect on the decay of
short-lasting potentiation induced by three trains of stimulation (Fig.
3A2). For all time points examined, three-train potentiation
was not significantly different between drug-treated and control slices
(p > 0.5). These experiments establish for the first
time in hippocampal slices that expression of a late phase of LTP in
the MPP of the dentate gyrus requires new protein synthesis.
Furthermore, emetine had no significant effects on baseline field EPSPs
and the early phase of LTP (Fig. 3A2,B).
Fig. 3.
The late phase of LTP in the MPP requires protein
synthesis. A1, Potentiation induced by ten 100 Hz trains
(delivered once/min at twice test pulse width) was significantly
attenuated in slices exposed to 25 µM emetine
(a protein synthesis inhibitor) for 40 min. The early phase of LTP,
extending from immediately after tetanization until ~70 min after
tetanization, was unaffected by emetine. Sample field EPSP traces were
recorded 10 min before and 3 hr after tetanization. Scale bars: 2 mV, 4 msec. A2, Emetine (25 µM) had no
effect on short-lasting potentiation induced by three 100 Hz trains
(delivered once/min at twice test pulse width). Controls, open
symbols; emetine, filled symbols. B, Acute
application of 25 µM emetine for 40 min had no
marked effects on baseline field EPSPs evoked at 0.02 Hz.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
The late phase of LTP in the MPP is mediated by transcription
We also tested whether gene transcription was required for
expression of L-LTP in the MPP. Acute exposure of hippocampal slices to
either 40 µM ACT-D or 0.2 mM
5,6-dichloro-1- -D-ribofuranosyl benzimidazole
(DRB), two inhibitors of transcription, significantly attenuated a late
stage of LTP without affecting the early stages. In the case of ACT-D,
the levels of potentiation in drug-treated slices were significantly
lower than in controls from 80 min after tetanization onward (Fig.
4A1; p < 0.05). The levels of
potentiation 3 hr after tetanization were 182 ± 16% of baseline in
controls and 130 ± 10% in drug-treated slices (Fig. 4A1;
p < 0.05). For DRB, we observed a slightly more gradual
decay of L-LTP. Levels of potentiation in DRB-treated slices were
significantly lower than those in controls beginning only from 100 min
after tetanization (Fig. 4B1; p < 0.05 for all
time points thereafter). The levels of facilitation in controls and
DRB-treated slices 3 hr after tetanization were 161 ± 11 and 118 ± 8%, respectively (Fig. 4B1; p < 0.05). Thus, at
concentrations that have been shown previously to effectively block
transcription in hippocampal slices (see Nguyen et al., 1994 ), these
two transcriptional inhibitors (which act through different mechanisms
of block) significantly attenuated the late phase of LTP, without
affecting the early stages, in the MPP.
Fig. 4.
Gene transcription mediates the late phase of LTP
in the MPP. A1, B1, Two different transcriptional
inhibitors, actinomycin D (ACT D; 40 µM) and
DRB (0.2 mM), blocked expression of L-LTP when
applied for 1 hr, beginning 30 min before start of tetanization. The
levels of facilitation were significantly lower in drug-treated slices
starting at 80 min after tetanus for ACT D (A1), and at 100 min after tetanus for DRB (B1) (p < 0.05 for unpaired t test comparisons with control slices). Sample
field EPSP traces were recorded 10 min before and 3 hr after
tetanization in both A1 and B1. Calibration bars
for both graphs: 2 mV, 4 msec. A2, B2, Neither 40 µM ACT-D nor 0.2 mM DRB
significantly affected baseline field EPSPs evoked at 0.02 Hz. ACT D
was dissolved in DMSO (0.1% final concentration).
[View Larger Version of this Image (31K GIF file)]
Repeated tetanization of the MPP induces a PKA-dependent late
phase of LTP
Earlier work has shown that cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity
is critical for expression of the late, but not the early, phase of LTP
in the Schaffer collateral pathway (Frey et al., 1994; Huang and
Kandel, 1994 ) and in the mossy fiber pathway (Huang et al., 1994 ). Is
the late phase of LTP in the MPP also dependent on PKA activity?
To address this question, we tested the effects of two inhibitors of
PKA, Rp-cAMPs and KT-5720, which act on the regulatory and on the
catalytic subunits specifically. After a 40 min exposure to 50 µM Rp-cAMPS (beginning 15 min before initiation
of tetanization), potentiation in drug-treated slices was significantly
attenuated from 30 min after tetanization (ten 100 Hz trains), as
compared with control slices that had been tetanized only (Fig.
5A1; p < 0.05 for all times from
30 min after tetanization). KT-5720, applied for 25 min, beginning 15 min before tetanization, also significantly reduced potentiation in
drug-treated slices (Fig. 6A1; p < 0.05 for all times from 50 min after tetanization). For both
inhibitors, the levels of potentiation observed 3 hr after tetanization
were 99 ± 9% (Rp-cAMPS) and 108 ± 11% (KT-5720) of baseline; in
untreated controls, these values were 158 ± 15 and 149 ± 10% of
baseline, respectively (Figs. 5A1, 6A1;
p < 0.05).
Fig. 5.
Rp-cAMPS, an inhibitor of PKA, blocks expression
of the late phase of LTP in the MPP of hippocampal slices.
A1, Slices treated with 50 µM
Rp-cAMPS for 40 min, beginning 15 min before tetanization, showed
decaying LTP that was significantly less than the potentiation observed
in untreated control slices 30 min after tetanization and thereafter.
Application of Rp-cAMPS overlapped with the tetanization protocol (ten
100 Hz trains, delivered once/min at twice the test pulse width).
Sample sweeps were taken 10 min before tetanization and 3 hr after the
first tetanus. Calibration bars: 2 mV, 4 msec. A2,
Short-lasting potentiation induced by three 100 Hz trains (delivered
once/min at twice test pulse width) is unaffected by 50 µM Rp-cAMPS. Rp-cAMPS was applied using the
same time window as for the L-LTP graph of part A1.
Controls, Open symbols. B, Rp-cAMPS (50 µM) applied for 40 min had no significant
effect on baseline field EPSP slopes evoked by 0.02 Hz stimulation of
the MPP.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
A second inhibitor of PKA, KT-5720, also prevents
full expression of L-LTP in the MPP. A1, A 30 min
application of 1 µM KT-5720, beginning 15 min
before tetanization, elicited a delayed decline of potentiation
beginning 30-40 min after tetanization. Levels of facilitation in
drug-treated slices were significantly lower than those in control
slices beginning 60 min after tetanization (p < 0.05 for 60 min after tetanization and all times thereafter). L-LTP was
induced using the same protocol as in Figure 5. Sample field EPSP
sweeps were recorded 10 min before and 3 hr after the start of
tetanization. Calibration bars: 2 mV, 4 msec. A2,
Short-lasting facilitation induced by three 100 Hz trains (delivered
once/min at twice test pulse width) is unaffected by 1 µM KT-5720. The inhibitor was applied for the
same time window as in part A1 of this graph. Controls,
Filled symbols. B, Acute exposure of slices to 1 µM KT-5720 for 30 min had no effect on baseline
field EPSPs evoked by 0.02 Hz stimulation of the MPP. KT-5720 was
dissolved in DMSO (0.1% final concentration).
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
In contrast to their attenuation of L-LTP, both Rp-cAMPS and KT-5720
had no significant effects on short-lasting potentiation elicited with
only three 100 Hz trains of stimulation (Figs. 5A2,
6A2). Slices that were treated with either inhibitor showed
potentiation that decayed back to 100-110% of pretetanus baseline
within 3 hr after tetanization. Control slices that were not exposed to
inhibitors also showed a gradually decaying potentiation that was not
significantly different in magnitude from that observed in treated
slices (Figs. 5A2, 6A2; p > 0.5 for
all points in both graphs).
Our findings show that, like L-LTP in the mossy fiber and Schaffer
collateral pathways, the late phase of LTP in the MPP also requires PKA
activity for full expression. Furthermore, short-lasting potentiation
induced by fewer trains does not require PKA activity.
Forskolin, an adenylate cyclase activator, induces a
transcription-dependent form of L-LTP in the MPP
To explore the possibility that L-LTP in the MPP can be simulated
by activation of the cAMP signaling pathway, we applied forskolin (an
activator of adenylate cyclase) to slices during 0.02 Hz test
stimulation of the MPP. A 15 min application of 50 µM forskolin potentiated field EPSPs evoked by
MPP stimulation: mean field EPSP slopes recorded 1, 2, and 3 hr after
forskolin application were 148 ± 9, 158 ± 12, and 160 ± 11% of
preforskolin baseline, respectively (Fig. 7A;
n = 7). These values were significantly greater than those
recorded from slices treated with an equal concentration of an inactive
forskolin analog
(7 -deacetyl-7 -[ -(morpholino)butyryl]hydrochloride) (Fig.
7B; p < 0.01 for all time points from 45 min
after forskolin). The inactive forskolin analog did not exert
significant effects on baseline field EPSP slopes over the 3 hr
recording period (Fig. 7B; n = 4).
Fig. 7.
Activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin
simulates late phase of LTP in the MPP. A, Slices treated
with 50 µM forskolin for 15 min showed a
gradual potentiation that reached a plateau level ~45 min after
forskolin application. This facilitation persisted for 3 hr during 0.02 Hz test stimulation of the MPP. ACT D (40 µM), a transcription inhibitor,
attenuated this facilitation when applied before and during
forskolin application. B, In contrast, 50 µM
7 -deacetyl-7 -[ -(morpholino)butyryl]hydrochloride, an
inactive forskolin analog, had no effect on baseline field EPSPs evoked
at 0.02 Hz. The analog was dissolved in DMSO (0.1% final
concentration). Normal magnesium and calcium levels were present in
these experiments.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Is gene transcription necessary for forskolin-induced facilitation of
transmission in the MPP? Acute application of the transcriptional
inhibitor ACT-D (40 µM, 1 hr) significantly
attenuated the synaptic potentiation elicited by forskolin (Fig.
7A). The levels of potentiation in slices treated with ACT-D
and forskolin (50 µM, 15 min, n = 7)
were 123 ± 10 and 126 ± 6% at 90 min and 3 hr after forskolin
application, respectively. These values were significantly lower than
those observed in slices treated with forskolin alone (165 ± 8 and 160 ± 11% at the same respective times; n = 6, p < 0.02).
These results reinforce those using inhibitors of PKA and demonstrate
that activation of the cAMP signaling pathway by forskolin produces
L-LTP of synaptic transmission in the MPP. They also suggest that once
triggered (by a transient application of forskolin), the cAMP signal
transduction pathway is capable of effecting persistent physiological
changes that lead to long-lasting facilitation, even though forskolin
is no longer present. Such persistent changes may involve the
activation of cAMP-inducible genes and the initiation of pre- and/or
postsynaptic structural changes.
DISCUSSION
LTP in MPP has distinctive requirements for induction
Cellular anatomical studies have established that the perforant
pathway is divided into two major divisions: the lateral pathway forms
excitatory synapses onto the outer one-third of the dentate granule
cells' dendrites in the molecular layer, and the medial pathway forms
excitatory synapses onto the middle third of these same dendrites
(Hjorth-Simonsen and Jeune, 1972 ; Steward, 1976 ; McNaughton and Barnes,
1977 ). These two pathways can be distinguished by their physiological
responses to paired-pulse stimulation: the lateral pathway shows
paired-pulse facilitation, whereas the medial pathway displays
paired-pulse depression (McNaughton, 1980 ; Colino and Malenka,
1993).
Our study has established that a long-lasting and robust LTP can be
induced in lowered extracellular magnesium by application of repeated
strong tetanization. Previous studies on LTP in the perforant pathway
of hippocampal slices have shown that the induction of robust LTP in
the dentate gyrus is facilitated by pharmacological disinhibition by
GABAA receptor antagonists (picrotoxin and
bicuculline) (Wigström and Gustafsson, 1983a ,b), and that in the
absence of such disinhibition, little potentiation can be reliably
induced in this area of the hippocampal slice (Wigström and
Gustafsson, 1983a ; Hanse and Gustafsson, 1993). This is consistent with
the extensive synaptic inhibition present within the dentate gyrus (for
review, see Soriano and Frotscher, 1993 ). We have not used
pharmacological blockade of GABAA receptors to
study L-LTP because, under our conditions of prolonged recording,
exposure to picrotoxin (50 µM) induced
epileptiform activity after evoked responses. Such afterdischarges
confounded the interpretation of results obtained during the
maintenance phase of LTP, especially because transcription and
translation are processes that can be activated and modulated by
electrical activity (Cole et al., 1989 ; Sheng et al., 1990 ; Abraham et
al., 1993 ; Qian et al., 1993 ). In contrast, lowered extracellular
magnesium, which facilitates NMDA receptor activation, enhanced
induction of L-LTP under our conditions, without eliciting repetitive
afterdischarges or spontaneous epileptiform activity, as measured with
extracellular electrodes.
Our study also extends the previous work of Hanse and Gustafsson
(1992b) by showing that the amount and strength of tetanization
determine the robustness and stability of LTP in the MPP of the dentate
gyrus in hippocampal slices. Unlike our study, however, Hanse and
Gustafsson (1992b) used picrotoxin and restricted their LTP
measurements to only the first 10-60 min after tetanization.
LTP in the MPP in hippocampal slices has both an early and a
late phase
Our findings demonstrate that LTP in the MPP of rat hippocampal
slices has two distinct temporal phases that involve different
molecular mechanisms for their expression. An early phase, lasting
~45 min, can be induced by three trains of high-frequency presynaptic
impulses and does not require new protein or mRNA synthesis. By
contrast, 10 trains produce a late phase (that emerges after the early
phase) that is blocked by inhibitors of protein and RNA synthesis.
The exact mechanisms underlying the early phase of LTP in the MPP were
not investigated in the present study, but previous work indicates that
the level of postsynaptic (granule cell) depolarization, and thereby
the level of postsynaptic Ca2+ influx, plays a
critical role in governing the stability of the early phase of LTP
(Hanse and Gustafsson, 1992a ,b; Colino and Malenka, 1993). In addition,
protein kinases appear to be critical for induction of the early phase,
because staurosporine (a general kinase inhibitor) attenuates the early
phase (Hanse and Gustafsson, 1994 ). In our experiments, inhibition of
PKA did not abolish the early phase; thus, other kinases must underlie
induction of the early phase. Such kinases may include
calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, PKC, and tyrosine
kinases.
Similarities and differences in the early and late phases of LTP in
all three regions of the hippocampus
In light of recent work on LTP in hippocampal slices, it is
worthwhile to compare the mechanisms underlying LTP in all three
regions of the mammalian hippocampus. In the CA1 region, the early
phase of Schaffer collateral LTP depends critically on the activities
of the Ca2+/calmodulin kinase, PKC, and tyrosine
kinases (for review, see Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ). In the early
phase of mossy fiber LTP PKA is involved (Huang et al., 1994 ; Weisskopf
et al., 1994 ). In the MPP, the mechanisms underlying the early phase
are unknown. Because inhibition of PKA did not reduce the early phase
of LTP (present study), other kinases (e.g.,
Ca2+/calmodulin kinase II) may be involved. Like
Schaffer collateral LTP (but unlike mossy fiber LTP), induction of LTP
in the MPP of the dentate gyrus occurs postsynaptically and requires
activation of the NMDA receptor channel and Ca2+
influx in the postsynaptic cell (Nicoll et al., 1988 ; Zalutsky and
Nicoll, 1990 ; Hanse and Gustafsson, 1992b ; Colino and Malenka, 1993)
(present study).
Unlike the early phase, the mechanisms for the late phase of LTP in all
three regions appear to be very similar, at least in outline. In all
three regions, the late phase requires new RNA and protein synthesis,
as well as the participation of PKA (Frey et al., 1993 ; Matthies and
Reymann, 1993 ; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Huang et al., 1994 ; Nguyen et
al., 1994 ) (present study). These mechanisms for the late phase of LTP
in the hippocampus (which are involved in explicit forms of learning)
resemble those used in Aplysia and Drosophila for
storing behavioral long-term memory for implicit forms of learning
(Montarolo et al., 1986 ; Dash et al., 1990 ; Drain et al., 1991 ;
Alberini et al., 1994 ; Tully et al., 1994 ; Yin et al., 1994 ). This
convergence of experimental data implies that different forms of
learning may use a common, conserved class of molecular mechanisms for
converting short-term memory into long-term memory: induction of genes
by cAMP and PKA.
Protein synthesis and the induction of L-LTP in the
dentate gyrus
Our finding that a late phase of LTP in the MPP of hippocampal
slices is blocked by protein synthesis inhibition extends and
consolidates previous work by others. Otani et al. (1989) and Krug et
al. (1984) also reported a protein synthesis requirement for L-LTP in
the dentate gyrus of anesthetized and freely moving rats. In these
studies and in our present experiments, protein synthesis inhibitors
did not affect expression of the early, transient phase of LTP, but
attenuated late phases. Although we have not shown that emetine
inhibited protein synthesis in dentate gyrus granule cells, an earlier
study by Stanton and Sarvey (1984) has demonstrated that, at
concentrations similar to that used in our present experiments, emetine
strongly blocked protein synthesis in whole hippocampal slices.
Is the site of protein synthesis pre- or postsynaptic? Although
whole-slice application of protein synthesis inhibitors does not permit
a definitive localization of the cellular site of protein synthesis, a
number of studies point to the postsynaptic granule cells as the
probable locus of changes in protein synthesis. First, blockade of
protein synthesis in the dentate gyrus of anesthetized rats attenuated
L-LTP, whereas inhibition in the entorhinal cortex (the site of the
cell bodies of the presynaptic perforant path axons) had no effect on
L-LTP (Otani and Abraham, 1989 ). Second, electrical stimulation leading
to potentiation induces a plethora of mRNAs and proteins in dentate
granule cells, including tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) (Qian et
al., 1993 ) and other immediate-early genes (Cole et al., 1989 ; Hughes
and Dragunow, 1995 ). Third, quantitative changes in protein synthesis
in the dentate gyrus in vivo have been reported (Fazeli et
al., 1993 ), although the identities of the proteins that change remain
to be established. Finally, it should be noted that in the transverse
hippocampal slice preparation, the cell bodies of the presynaptic
perforant axons, situated in the entorhinal cortex, are absent.
Furthermore, it is interesting to note that in area CA1 of hippocampal
slices, only a transient early phase of LTP is present in postsynaptic
CA1 dendrites that were severed from CA1 pyramidal cell bodies (Frey et
al., 1989 ). Hence, the cumulative evidence points to a postsynaptic
site of gene and protein induction for L-LTP in the MPP.
Are cAMP-inducible genes involved in L-LTP in the
dentate gyrus?
L-LTP in all three regions of the hippocampus requires
transcription and can be simulated by forskolin-induced activation of
the cAMP signal transduction pathway (Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Huang et
al., 1994 ; Nguyen et al., 1994 ; see also Chavez-Noriega and Stevens,
1994 ). Our observations that a transient application of forskolin
induced a long-lasting form of potentiation that was attenuated by
transcriptional inhibition, and that a late phase of LTP induced by
repeated tetanization was also blocked by transcriptional inhibitors,
raises the likely possibility that cAMP-inducible gene expression is
involved in mediating L-LTP in the MPP. Indeed, CREB and MAP kinase
phosphorylation appear to be increased in the dentate gyrus after acute
forskolin application to slices (Sarvey and Voulalas, 1995 ; Voulalas
and Sarvey, 1995 ), and cAMP levels are increased transiently
immediately after tetanization of the perforant path (Stanton and
Sarvey, 1985 ). Our finding that PKA is critical for L-LTP induction
further strengthens the idea that cAMP-induced gene expression,
initiated by PKA-mediated phosphorylation of transcription factors such
as CREB, is a critical component of the molecular machinery leading up
to the establishment of the late phase of LTP in the MPP.
Which cAMP-inducible genes are activated during L-LTP in the
hippocampus? In Aplysia, long-term (but not short-term)
facilitation is accompanied by translocation of the catalytic subunit
of PKA to the nucleus (Bacskai et al., 1993 ), where it appears to
phosphorylate CREB-related transcription factors that activate a
cascade of cAMP-inducible immediate-early genes (Dash et al., 1990 ;
Kaang et al., 1993 ). One of the genes induced in the sensory neurons by
cAMP is the Aplysia homolog of the mammalian transcription
factor C/EBP (ApC/EBP) (Alberini et al., 1994 ). Blocking the function
of ApC/EBP in sensory neurons inhibits long-term, but not short-term,
facilitation (Alberini et al., 1994 ). That the late phase of LTP in all
three regions of the hippocampus also requires PKA activity raises the
intriguing possibility that, in the hippocampus as well, cAMP and PKA
are recruited to induce immediate-early genes that modulate and control
the molecular machinery for expression of L-LTP. This molecular
repertoire may involve the growth and differentiation of new synaptic
connections (Desmond and Levy, 1986a ,b; Bailey and Kandel, 1993 ).
FOOTNOTES
Received Nov. 27, 1995; revised Feb. 23, 1996; accepted Feb. 26, 1996.
This work was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
(E.R.K.), National Institute on Aging Center for Alzheimer's Disease
Research Grant AG08702, and National Institute of General Medical
Sciences Grant GM32099. P.V.N. is a Fellow of the Medical Research
Council of Canada. E.R.K. is Senior Investigator of the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute. We thank Mark Mayford, Steve Siegelbaum, and Yan-You
Huang for constructive comments on this manuscript, and Harriet Ayers
and Chuck Lam for preparing this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Peter Nguyen, Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, 722 West 168th Street, New York, NY
10032.
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J. D. Pita-Almenar, M. S. Collado, C. M. Colbert, and A. Eskin
Different Mechanisms Exist for the Plasticity of Glutamate Reuptake during Early Long-Term Potentiation (LTP) and Late LTP
J. Neurosci.,
October 11, 2006;
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R. Guzman-Marin, Z. Ying, N. Suntsova, M. Methippara, T. Bashir, R. Szymusiak, F. Gomez-Pinilla, and D. McGinty
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Y. Zhao, K. Leal, C. Abi-Farah, K. C. Martin, W. S. Sossin, and M. Klein
Isoform Specificity of PKC Translocation in Living Aplysia Sensory Neurons and a Role for Ca2+-Dependent PKC APL I in the Induction of Intermediate-Term Facilitation.
J. Neurosci.,
August 23, 2006;
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P. Smolen, D. A. Baxter, and J. H. Byrne
A Model of the Roles of Essential Kinases in the Induction and Expression of Late Long-Term Potentiation
Biophys. J.,
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G. C.-K. Chan, S. Tonegawa, and D. R. Storm
Hippocampal Neurons Express a Calcineurin-Activated Adenylyl Cyclase
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M. Pickering, D. Cumiskey, and J. J O'Connor
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Exp Physiol,
September 1, 2005;
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