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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2000, 20(21):7880-7887
Long-Term Potentiation Induced by Frequency Stimulation Is
Regulated by a Protein Phosphatase-1-Operated Gate
George P.
Brown1,
Robert D.
Blitzer2, 3,
John H.
Connor4,
Tony
Wong2,
Shirish
Shenolikar4,
Ravi
Iyengar1, and
Emmanuel M.
Landau1, 2, 3
Departments of 1 Pharmacology and
2 Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New
York 10029, 3 Psychiatry Service, Bronx Veterans
Administration Medical Center, Bronx, New York 10468, and
4 Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke
University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27712
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ABSTRACT |
Long-term potentiation (LTP) can be induced in the Schaffer
collateral CA1 synapse of hippocampus by stimulation in the frequency range (5-12 Hz), an effect that depends on activation of the
cAMP pathway. We investigated the mechanisms of the cAMP contribution
to this form of LTP in the rat hippocampal slice preparation. pulse
stimulation (TPS; 150 stimuli at 10 Hz) by itself did not induce LTP,
but the addition of either the -adrenergic agonist isoproterenol or
the cAMP analog 8-bromo-cAMP (8-Br-cAMP) enabled TPS-induced LTP. The
isoproterenol effect was blocked by postsynaptic inhibition of
cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Several lines of evidence indicated that
cAMP enabled LTP by blocking postsynaptic protein phosphatase-1 (PP1).
Activators of the cAMP pathway reduced PP1 activity in the CA1 region
and increased the active form of inhibitor-1, an endogenous inhibitor
of PP1. Postsynaptic injection of activated inhibitor-1 mimicked the
LTP-enabling effect of cAMP pathway stimulation. TPS evoked complex
spiking when isoproterenol was present. However, complex spiking was
not sufficient to enable TPS-induced LTP, which additionally required
the inhibition of postsynaptic PP1. PP1 inhibition seems to promote the
activation of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein
kinase (CaMKII), because (1) a CaMKII inhibitor blocked the
induction of LTP by TPS paired with either isoproterenol or activated
inhibitor-1 and (2) CaMKII in area CA1 was activated by the combination
of TPS and 8-Br-cAMP but not by either stimulus alone. These results
indicate that the cAMP pathway enables TPS-induced LTP by inhibiting
PP1, thereby enhancing Ca2+-independent CaMKII activity.
Key words:
LTP induction; cAMP-dependent protein kinase; inhibitor-1; protein phosphatase-1; Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase; gating; complex spikes
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INTRODUCTION |
Many synapses in the CNS can be
strengthened or weakened by repetitive stimulation. This phenomenon has
been intensively studied in the rodent hippocampus, particularly at the
synapse between the pyramidal cells of areas CA3 and CA1 (Bliss and
Collingridge, 1993 ; Malenka and Nicoll, 1999 ), and many of these
studies have investigated how particular patterns of stimulation give
rise to different forms of synaptic plasticity. Such factors as the frequency, intensity, and duration of the stimulation determine whether
the synapse is strengthened or weakened, as well as the persistence of
the synaptic change. Remarkably, even when two different patterns
induce seemingly similar synaptic changes, they may do so via different
molecular mechanisms. Efforts to understand the role of the pattern of
stimulation in synaptic plasticity may prove particularly valuable,
because pronounced spontaneous frequency variations characterize
hippocampal neuronal activity in behaving animals (Fenton and Muller,
1998 ). Studies in hippocampal slices have established that the pattern
of stimulation determines the mechanism of synaptic change, so it is
reasonable to speculate that the natural patterns of the hippocampus
in vivo may give rise to multiple forms of synaptic plasticity.
An important principle of pattern-dependent plasticity is the
relationship between stimulus frequency and the direction of synaptic
change (Dudek and Bear, 1992 ; Katsuki et al., 1997 ). In slices of rat
hippocampus, low-frequency stimulation (1-3 Hz; LFS) produces a
long-term depression of synaptic transmission (LTD). Conversely,
long-term potentiation (LTP) is induced when stimulation is delivered
at higher frequencies (30-100 Hz; HFS). The crossover or neutral
frequency, at which repetitive stimulation does not modify synaptic
strength, is ~10 Hz at this synapse. However, the relationship
between the stimulation frequency and the direction of the change in
synaptic strength is sensitive to certain pharmacological
manipulations, including the inhibition of protein kinases or
phosphatases and the activation of -adrenergic receptors (Coussens
and Teyler, 1996 ; Thomas et al., 1996 ; Katsuki et al., 1997 ). In both
mouse and rat hippocampal slices, LTP can be induced by stimulation at
the neutral frequency in the presence of a -adrenoceptor agonist, an
effect that is mediated by the cAMP-signaling pathway (Thomas et al.,
1996 ).
This pharmacological modification of the relationship between pattern
and LTP touches on a relatively unexplored issue in LTP research. The
intact hippocampus is richly innervated by other nuclei, such as the
noradrenergic locus ceruleus. These extrinsic inputs may provide
another level of control over hippocampal synaptic plasticity, in
addition to any intrinsic variations in the frequency of hippocampal
activity. Under certain conditions extrinsic input could be a major
determinant of synaptic change, such as when a synapse is being
activated at a rate near the neutral frequency. The slice data suggest
that an increase in noradrenergic input could induce LTP at such
synapses. In the behaving rat, a predominant component of hippocampal
activity occurs near the neutral frequency, in the range of 5-12 Hz
( frequency). Therefore, variations in noradrenergic tone may exert
an important influence on synaptic plasticity in vivo.
Most investigations of LTP in hippocampal slices have used multiple
trains of HFS for induction, usually delivered at 100 Hz. We and others
have shown a requirement for the cAMP pathway in HFS-induced LTP and
have demonstrated the existence of a postsynaptic gating mechanism that
regulates the induction of LTP (Frey et al., 1993 ; Blitzer et al.,
1995 , 1998 ; Otmakhova et al., 2000 ). The gating mechanism comprises two
antagonistic pathways. The cAMP arm favors LTP induction and includes
adenylyl cyclase, cAMP, and cAMP-dependent kinase (PKA). Opposing the
cAMP pathway is calcineurin, a
Ca2+/calmodulin-activated protein
phosphatase. These pathways converge on the regulatory protein
inhibitor-1, which in its phosphorylated form inhibits protein
phosphatase-1 (PP1). The postsynaptic Ca2+
entry that accompanies HFS is thought to activate both arms of the
gating mechanism, as well as the LTP-signaling pathway that begins with
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase
(CaMKII) (Lisman, 1994 ). The same gating mechanism might explain
how -adrenergic stimulation enables neutral frequency stimulation to
induce LTP. The source of postsynaptic cAMP in this case would be
-receptor-activated adenylyl cyclases, whereas the
Ca2+ influx associated with frequency
stimulation would activate both calcineurin and CaMKII.
The cAMP pathway influences the behavior of many membrane channels and
signaling systems, so it is likely to contribute to synaptic plasticity
in ways that are independent of the PP1 gate. Recent work in mouse
hippocampus has shown a cAMP-mediated increase in postsynaptic
excitability that is important in pulse stimulation (TPS)-induced
LTP (Thomas et al., 1998 ; Winder et al., 1999 ). These studies establish
that TPS must evoke postsynaptic burst spiking for LTP to occur and
that -adrenergic stimulation enhances this activity. The mechanism
underlying this effect of the cAMP pathway is not well understood, but
it may be mediated by an increase in the activity of MAP kinase (ERK).
The present study was conducted to investigate the mechanisms
underlying the contribution of the cAMP pathway to TPS-induced LTP.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Electrophysiology. Dissection and recording methods
were similar to those described previously (Blitzer et al., 1995 ).
Intracellular recordings of area CA1 neurons from male Sprague Dawley
rats (125-200 gm) were obtained in a submersion chamber at 31°C.
Slices were superfused with a solution containing (in mM)
NaCl (118), KCl (3.5), MgSO4 (1.3),
CaCl2 (3.5),
NaH2PO4 (1.25),
NaHCO3 (24), and glucose (15) and bubbled with
95% O2/5% CO2. Cells in
the stratum pyramidale were impaled with sharp electrodes containing 3 M KCl (Re = 60-90 M ), and
field recordings were made with electrodes (2 M
NaCl; Re = 2-5
M ) placed in the stratum radiatum.
Isoproterenol, 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV), and 8-bromo-cAMP
(8-Br-cAMP) were applied in the superfusate. Thiophosphorylated
inhibitor-1 (I-1), recombinant T35A nonphosphorylatable I-1,
autocamtide-3, its control peptide (gifts of A. P. Braun and H. Schulman), and the Rp isomer of cyclic
adenosine-3',5'-monophosphothioate (Rp-cAMPS) were included in the
intracellular electrode and allowed to diffuse into the cell; in these
experiments, TPS was delivered 40 min after impalement. For
synaptic stimulation, monophasic, constant-current pulses (100 µsec
in duration) were delivered to the Schaffer collaterals (stratum
radiatum in area CA3). Test pulses were usually delivered in series of
four pulses (5 sec apart), with the series separated by 5 min, and the
EPSPs within each series were averaged. For some experiments
(see Fig. 5), test stimuli were given every 30 sec, and the
EPSPs were not averaged. EPSP amplitude and maximum initial slope
(defined as the greatest slope within any 1 msec interval between the
stimulus artifact and the EPSP peak) were measured either off-line for
the averaged waveforms or on-line for the individual EPSPs in some
experiments (see Fig. 5). TPS consisted of a single train of 150 stimuli delivered at 10 Hz. For most experiments that included
intracellular recording, the stimulus intensity was adjusted to produce
a 10-15 mV intracellular EPSP. However, in experiments designed to
induce repetitive postsynaptic spiking (see Fig. 5), a stronger
stimulus was used during TPS, sufficient to evoke single spikes
reliably during pre-TPS test pulses. This stimulus was approximately
twice as strong as that used during TPS in the other experiments. For
those experiments using only field recording, the stimulus during TPS
was adjusted to evoke a 1 mV field potential during test pulses. Data
were analyzed by Student's t test or by ANOVAs followed by
Newman-Keuls post hoc comparisons. Summary data are
presented as group means with SE bars.
CaMKII activity. Hippocampal slices were incubated with
8-Br-cAMP for 2-5 hr before recording. Control slices were stimulated with TPS alone, 8-Br-cAMP alone, or neither. The slices were removed from the recording chamber and placed on a cold plate within 2-3 min
after TPS, and the CA1 region was dissected out and frozen at 70°C.
Extracts from individual CA1 regions were assayed for CaMKII activity
essentially as described (Mayford et al., 1995 ). Tissue was homogenized
in a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 0.5 mM EGTA, 0.5 mM EDTA, 15 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 25 mM NaF, 75 µg/ml leupeptin, 0.1 mg/ml
aprotinin, 0.4 mM DTT, and 0.1 mM PMSF. Protein
levels were assayed by Lowry assay using BSA as the standard. The
enzyme reaction mix consisted of 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl2, 100 µg/ml BSA, 200 µg/ml leupeptin, 0.4 mM DTT, 0.6 mM EGTA, 0.2 mM EGTA, 2 µM Wiptide (PKA inhibitor; American Peptide Co.), 2 µM PKC (19-36) peptide (PKC
inhibitor; American Peptide Co.), 200 µM ATP, 100 µCi/ml [ -32P]ATP, and 20 µM autocamtide II (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA), with either
1 mM CaCl2 and 5 µg/ml calmodulin
(total activity) or 2 mM EGTA
(Ca2+-independent activity). Enzyme
reactions were performed in quadruplicate at 30°C for 1 min in a
final volume of 50 µl. The reaction was initiated by the addition of
2 µg of CA1 extract and terminated by the addition of an equal volume
of 10% ice-cold TCA. Protein was pelleted, and the supernatant was
spotted onto Whatman P81 filter paper and washed three times for 5 min
with water. The amount of 32P incorporated
into substrate peptide was determined by liquid scintillation counting.
Inhibitor-1 immunoblotting. Hippocampal slices were placed
in a submersion chamber bubbled with 95% O2/5%
CO2, at room temperature, and were exposed to
either 8-Br-cAMP (1 mM for >2 hr) or isoproterenol (1 µM for 10 min). Immediately after treatment, the slices
were frozen, and the CA1 region was dissected out and stored at
70°C. The tissue samples were lysed in 100 µl of lysis buffer (50 mM Tris, 4 mM EGTA, 10 mM EDTA, 15 mM Na phosphate, 100 mM -glycerol phosphate,
10 mM NaF, 0.1 mM pepstatin, 1 mM
PMSF, and 2 mM benzamidine, pH 7.5) and ground three times
for 30 sec each with a pellet pestle (Kontes glassware). The resulting
lysate was spun down at 15,000 × g at 4°C for 10 min, and the supernatant was then assayed for total protein
concentration. Twenty micrograms of protein from each sample were run
on a 15% SDS-PAGE gel. The samples were transferred onto a
polyvinylidene difluoride membrane overnight (25 A constant current)
and then blotted with an antibody to either phosphorylated DARPP-32/I-1 or recombinant human I-1. The monoclonal antibody to phosphorylated DARPP-32/I-1 was provided by G. L. Snyder and P. Greengard (Snyder et al., 1992 ). Both blots were developed using ECL
and then digitized with a densitometer and analyzed using ImageQuant.
Protein phosphatase-1 activity. Hippocampal slices were
treated and dissected as described for the I-1 immunoblot (above). Individual CA1 regions were homogenized in 50 mM Tris, pH
7.5, 0.2 mM EDTA, 2 µg/ml leupeptin, 2 µg/ml
aprotinin, and 10 nM okadaic acid. Phosphatase activity of
20 ng of CA1 extract was measured with the Protein Phosphatase Assay
System (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) in a final concentration
of 3.3 nM okadaic acid. Each group was run in
quadruplicate. By the use of this method, inclusion of 100 nM thiophosphorylated I-1 inhibited > 85% of phosphatase activity, confirming the selectivity of the system for PP1.
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RESULTS |
TPS-induced LTP requires the postsynaptic cAMP pathway
The initial experiments were designed to establish the conditions
for inducing LTP in adult rat hippocampal slices using TPS and
-adrenergic stimulation (TPS-LTP). The combination of TPS (150 stimuli delivered to the Schaffer collaterals at 10 Hz) and isoproterenol (1 µM) reliably produced LTP (Fig.
1A,B; intracellular EPSP slope = 173 ± 8% of baseline at 30 min). During
isoproterenol application, the EPSP was depressed in some slices;
however, no persistent effect of isoproterenol alone was observed after
30 min of washout (Fig. 1B). When isoproterenol was
omitted, there was a nonsignificant tendency for TPS alone to depress
synaptic transmission (intracellular slope = 85 ± 11% of
baseline at 30 min; n = 6).

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Figure 1.
The induction of LTP by activation of the
postsynaptic cAMP pathway paired with frequency synaptic
stimulation. A, Postsynaptic blockade of the cAMP
pathway prevents TPS-LTP. A1, The
graph shows the time course of the mean intracellular EPSP slope; the
arrow denotes the time of TPS. In cells exposed to 1 µM isoproterenol in the superfusate
(horizontal bar), TPS induced a slowly developing LTP
(filled circles; n = 6). When
TPS was delivered in the absence of isoproterenol (open
circles; n = 6), a nonsignificant trend
toward synaptic depression was observed (ANOVA, p > 0.10). Intracellular injection of Rp-cAMPS (filled
triangles; n = 5) blocked LTP after a
transient potentiation. All groups differed from one another over the
last 5 min of recording (final 3 time points; Newman-Keuls test, all
p values < 0.05).
A2, Sample traces, with
top and bottom panels showing
intracellular and corresponding field potentials, respectively, are
presented. Traces were obtained during the baseline
period and at 30 min after TPS (arrow). Calibration: 20 mV intracellular, 500 µV extracellular; 5 msec. Note that the
inhibition of LTP by Rp-cAMPS was restricted to the recorded cell.
B, Summary of intracellular and field results from all
slices is shown. The data were obtained 30 min after TPS.
C, The pairing of TPS with 8-Br-cAMP induces LTP.
8-Br-cAMP (500 µM) was applied in the superfusate
for 30 min (indicated by the gray horizonal arrow),
ending with the delivery of TPS (black
arrow). LTP was induced only when TPS was paired
with 8-Br-cAMP. Inset, Representative
traces are shown. Calibration: 200 µV; 5 msec.
D, 8-Br-cAMP does not regulate NMDA receptor-mediated
EPSPs (n = 5). Field recordings were obtained in
low Mg2+ (nominally 50 µM) and in
the presence of 10 µM DNQX. EPSPs were recorded
during a train of TPS before 8-Br-cAMP application and after 8-Br-cAMP
washout (combined as control, filled bar) and in
the presence of 500 µM 8-Br-cAMP (hatched
bar). The data indicate the mean slope of the final 10 stimuli
in the train. There were no statistically significant group differences
(paired t test, p > 0.10).
ISO, Isoproterenol.
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-Adrenergic stimulation increases neuronal cAMP production in the
CA1 region, and postsynaptic effects of -adrenergic agonists have
been attributed to increased cAMP in CA1 pyramidal cells (Segal et al.,
1981 ; Madison and Nicoll, 1986 ; Pedarzani and Storm, 1993 ). If the
-adrenergic contribution to TPS-induced LTP (TPS-LTP) is also
mediated by the cAMP-dependent inhibition of PP1, then direct
activation of the cAMP pathway should also enable TPS-LTP. This
prediction was tested by delivering TPS in the presence of the
membrane-permeable analog 8-Br-cAMP. By itself, 8-Br-cAMP had no effect
on synaptic efficiency (97 ± 6% at 30 min; n = 3). However, 8-Br-cAMP enabled TPS to induce LTP (Fig. 1C;
156 ± 12% at 30 min; n = 7).
The cAMP pathway exerts both presynaptic and postsynaptic effects that
are likely to influence synaptic plasticity at the CA3 CA1 synapse
(Madison and Nicoll, 1986 ; Ma et al., 1999 ). To determine
whether the LTP-promoting effect of cAMP pathway activation was
mediated by the postsynaptic cAMP pathway, we included the inhibitory
cAMP analog Rp-cAMPS in the intracellular electrode and stimulated with
TPS and isoproterenol. In these cells, the synaptic response was
potentiated only transiently and returned to near-baseline levels
within 30 min. Thus, activation of the postsynaptic cAMP pathway by
-adrenergic stimulation was necessary for TPS to generate LTP. The
effect of Rp-cAMPS, together with the mimicry of the isoproterenol
effect by 8-Br-cAMP, indicates that the only contribution of
-adrenergic stimulation to TPS-LTP is the activation of the
postsynaptic cAMP pathway.
Ca2+ influx through NMDA channels is
required for the induction of LTP by a variety of stimulus protocols
(Larson and Lynch, 1988 ; Perkel et al., 1993 ; English and Sweatt, 1996 ;
Thomas et al., 1996 ). The previously identified role of cAMP in the
induction of LTP as an inhibitor of postsynaptic PP1 activity places
it downstream of Ca2+ influx. However,
there are reports of cAMP-dependent regulation of NMDA channels (Raman
et al., 1996 ; Westphal et al., 1999 ) and increased
Ca2+ entry through NMDA channels would be
likely to promote LTP. To test whether cAMP-dependent NMDA receptor
regulation contributes to TPS-LTP, the NMDA component of the EPSP was
isolated by recording in a low-Mg2+
solution containing the AMPA receptor antagonist DNQX (10 µM). TPS was delivered to the slices in the presence or
absence of 500 µM 8-Br-cAMP. The mean amplitude of the
final 10 field EPSPs was determined, because any effect of accelerated
recovery of NMDA conductance should be most pronounced late in the TPS
train. 8-Br-cAMP had no significant effect on the NMDA-mediated EPSP (Fig. 1D), suggesting that the enhancement of
NMDA-mediated currents by cAMP is not likely to play a major role in
TPS-induced LTP.
In the mouse hippocampus, TPS-induced LTP requires complex spiking
during TPS, an effect that occurs in the absence of -receptor activation but that is accentuated and prolonged by isoproterenol (Thomas et al., 1998 ; Winder et al., 1999 ). In field recordings obtained during TPS, we found that TPS alone did not evoke complex spikes, or even single spikes (Fig.
2A). However, complex
potentials were apparent during TPS when isoproterenol was present. As
noted previously (Winder et al., 1999 ), the negativity of these spikes suggests that they are dendritic potentials, presumably resulting from
backpropagation from the soma. Complex waveforms were exhibited within
30 stimuli (the earliest sample obtained during TPS), and the number of
discrete potentials per trace remained quite constant for the remainder
of the train (Fig. 2B). These results indicate that,
as with mouse hippocampus, the facilitation of repetitive spiking may
be an important factor in the ability of -adrenergic stimulation to
enable LTP in the rat hippocampus.

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Figure 2.
TPS evokes complex potentials when paired with
isoproterenol. A, Representative field
traces recorded immediately before the start of TPS
(PRE) and at every 30th stimulus during TPS. In the
absence of isoproterenol (top records), no spikes were
seen during TPS. The increase in the duration of the EPSP relative to
the baseline was typically observed in this experiment. When
isoproterenol was present (bottom traces), the unitary
EPSP was replaced by a complex waveform, which included spike
potentials. Calibration: 500 µV; 10 msec. B, Summary
of the number of discrete components in sampled field
traces during TPS in the absence (hatched
bars; n = 5) and presence
(filled bars; n = 5) of 1 µM isoproterenol. The groups differed significantly
(p < 0.02), and there was no patterning
effect during TPS (F < 1).
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Activation of the cAMP pathway suppresses PP1 activity and
phosphorylates inhibitor-1
Previous work from this lab established that the cAMP pathway
participates in HFS-induced LTP by inhibiting the activity of PP1
(Blitzer et al., 1998 ). A piece of evidence suggesting that the cAMP
pathway may serve a similar role in TPS-LTP is the ability of
phosphatase blockers to mimic the LTP-enabling effect of -adrenergic stimulation in this induction protocol (Coussens and Teyler, 1996 ; Thomas et al., 1996 ).
To test whether cAMP-mediated phosphatase inhibition might underlie the
role of the cAMP pathway in TPS-induced LTP, we first assayed PP1
activity in the CA1 region of slices exposed to 8-Br-cAMP (Fig.
3A). A reliable reduction in
PP1 activity was produced by 8-Br-cAMP relative to unstimulated
controls. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that activation
of the postsynaptic cAMP pathway contributes to TPS-induced LTP by
inhibiting PP1.

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Figure 3.
The role of protein phosphatase-1 in
TPS-induced LTP. A, Protein phosphatase activity in CA1
is inhibited by activation of the cAMP pathway. In slices exposed to 1 mM 8-Br-cAMP for 30 min, total phosphatase activity was
significantly lower than that in untreated controls
(p < 0.05). Similar results were obtained
in two independent experiments. The selectivity of the assay for PP1 is
shown by the ability of 100 nM thiophosphorylated
inhibitor-1 (I-1-P) to block >85% of total phosphatase
activity, indicated by the black bar and dashed
line. B, Endogenous protein phosphatase
inhibitor-1 is phosphorylated by stimulation of the cAMP pathway.
Tissue homogenates were probed with a monoclonal antibody
recognizing either the phosphorylated form of inhibitor-1 selectively
(top gel) or both the phosphorylated and
nonphosphorylated inhibitor-1 (bottom gel).
Isoproterenol (10 µM) and 8-Br-cAMP (500 µM) increased the levels of
Thr35-phosphorylated I-1 4.04 (± 2.28)-fold and
2.75 (± 0.62)-fold, respectively, relative to unstimulated tissue and
normalized for total I-1 levels. Both isoproterenol and 8-Br-cAMP
increased the level of thiophosphorylated inhibitor-1 (top
gel) without significantly changing the total amount of
inhibitor-1. Similar results were obtained in two other experiments.
C, Postsynaptic inhibition of PP1 mimics cAMP pathway
activation in TPS-LTP. C1, The time
course of LTP induced by TPS paired with thiophosphorylated I-1 is
shown. The time of TPS is indicated by the arrow.
Thiophosphorylated I-1 (Thio-P I-1; 10 µM; n = 9) or inactive,
nonphosphorylatable I-1 (T35A I-1; 10 µM; n = 8) was applied in the
intracellular electrode. A slowly developing LTP was induced by TPS
only when thiophosphorylated I-1 was present, with the two groups
differing significantly over the last three time points of the
experiment (ANOVA, p < 0.05).
Inset, Sample intracellular and field
traces (top and bottom
panels, respectively) from a T35A I-1 experiment
(left) and a Thio-P I-1 experiment
(right) are shown. Presentation details are as described
in Figure 1. No field LTP was obtained in any of the slices in this
experiment. Calibration: 10 mV intracellular, 250 µV
extracellular; 5 msec. C2,
Summary data of intracellular and field data at 30 min after TPS are
shown. The intracellular data were derived from the experiment shown in
C1. CON, Control.
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The most likely mechanism for the cAMP-induced decrease in PP1 activity
involves inhibitor-1. Biochemical experiments have established that PKA
phosphorylates I-1, which is a direct and specific inhibitor of PP1
(Shenolikar, 1994 ), and this pathway was identified as the mechanism of
cAMP-dependent HFS-induced LTP (Blitzer et al., 1998 ). If the role of
the cAMP pathway in TPS-LTP is mediated by the I-1 mechanism, then
-adrenergic receptor agonists and cAMP pathway activators should
increase I-1 phosphorylation in the CA1 region. To test this
prediction, isoproterenol or 8-Br-cAMP was applied to hippocampal
slices, followed by determination of total and phosphorylated I-1 in
CA1. Both isoproterenol and 8-Br-cAMP increased
Thr35-phosphorylated I-1 levels, by
fourfold and threefold, respectively (Fig. 3B).
Inhibitor-1 substitutes for the cAMP pathway in TPS-LTP
If phosphorylation of I-1 mediates the isoproterenol effect in
TPS-LTP, then postsynaptic application of phosphorylated I-1 should
mimic the effect of isoproterenol by enabling TPS to induce LTP. When
cells were recorded with electrodes containing recombinant, constitutively active thiophosphorylated I-1, TPS alone was sufficient to induce LTP (Fig. 3C; 165 ± 16% at 30 min). In
control cells injected with the nonphosphorylatable T35A mutant of I-1,
TPS induced only a transient potentiation, which returned to baseline within 10 min (109 ± 9% at 30 min). Thiophosphorylated I-1 had no effect on the EPSP when TPS was omitted (103 ± 11% at the
corresponding time point; n = 3). The ability of
activated I-1 to substitute for -adrenergic stimulation provides
strong support for I-1 as the mediator of the cAMP pathway contribution
to TPS-LTP.
CaMKII integrates TPS and the cAMP pathway in TPS-induced LTP
Many studies have identified CaMKII as an essential component of
the LTP-signaling pathway, at least during the induction phase (Lledo
et al., 1995 ; Otmakhov et al., 1997 ). The induction of LTP by
trains of HFS is accompanied by increased
Thr286 phosphorylation of CaMKII and the
generation of Ca2+-independent CaMKII
activity (Malinow et al., 1989 ; Fukunaga et al., 1995 ; Blitzer et al.,
1998 ). CaMKII is a substrate for PP1 (Strack et al., 1997 ), and the
cAMP-regulated phosphatase gate described for HFS-induced LTP acts
directly on CaMKII (Blitzer et al., 1998 ).
The role of CaMKII in TPS-LTP and its possible interaction with
cAMP-sensitive phosphatase activity were explored in a series of
experiments. First, we determined whether postsynaptic CaMKII activity
is required for TPS-LTP by recording from cells with electrodes filled
with either the selective CaMKII inhibitor autocamtide-3 or an inactive
control peptide (Braun and Schulman, 1995 ). Autocamtide-3 blocks CaMKII
and protein kinase C with IC50 values of ~3 and ~500 µM, respectively. On the basis of previous work
with inhibitors introduced through intracellular electrodes (Hvalby et
al., 1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ), we estimate that our electrode
concentration of 5 mM yielded an intracellular
concentration of ~50 µM, which is expected to
effectively block CaMKII with little effect on protein kinase C. TPS
paired with isoproterenol induced LTP in the cells injected with the
control peptide, but no LTP was seen in cells recorded with
autocamtide-3 (Fig.
4A). In addition, LTP was blocked by the bath-applied NMDA antagonist APV (Fig.
4A2). These results identify CaMKII as a necessary
signaling component in TPS-LTP and suggest that, in common with several
other forms of LTP, CaMKII is activated by
Ca2+ influx through NMDA channels.

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Figure 4.
CaMKII integrates TPS and cAMP pathway
stimulation. A, Postsynaptic CaMKII activity is required
for TPS-LTP. A1, Time course graph of
intracellular EPSPs is shown. The horizontal bar
indicates isoproterenol application, and the arrow near
the x-axis shows the time of TPS. The intracellular
electrode contained either inactive control peptide (5 mM; filled symbols;
n = 5) or the CaMKII inhibitor autocamtide-3
(AC3; 5 mM; open
symbols; n = 5). Normal LTP was obtained in
the control cells, but LTP was absent in cells injected with
AC3. The groups differed significantly over the last
three time points (ANOVA, p < 0.01).
Inset, Representative intracellular and field EPSPs from
a control peptide experiment (left) and from an
AC3 experiment (right) are shown.
Presentation details are as described in Figure 1. Calibration: 10 mV
intracellular, 250 µV extracellular; 10 msec.
A2, Summary graph of data recorded at
30 min after TPS is shown. The filled bars represent
changes in intracellular synaptic strength, and the hatched
bars represent field data. Con Pep,
Peptide control for AC3. The only group to exhibit
intracellular LTP was the combined TPS plus Con Pep
group, which was significantly different from both other groups
(Newman-Keuls test, p values < 0.05).
B, TPS paired with 8-Br-cAMP (500 µM)
increases Ca2+-independent CaMKII activity. Similar
results were obtained in three independent experiments, one of which is
shown here. The slices that were exposed to the combination treatment
showed significantly greater CaMKII activity in the absence of
Ca2+ than did all other groups (Newman-Keuls test,
*p < 0.05), which did not differ among themselves.
No group differences in total CaMKII activity were observed (ANOVA,
p > 0.20; mean activity = 3.29 ± 0.39 pmol·µg 1·min 1 pooled
across groups). C, The blockade of LTP by a CaMKII
inhibitor is resistant to PP1 suppression. Summary of results from
experiments in which LTP was induced using TPS, with data taken from
the final three time points (26-30 min after TPS), is shown.
Substances were applied in the intracellular recording electrode.
Autocamtide-3 (2.5 mM) was combined either with
nonphosphorylatable T35A I-1 (T35A;
filled bar; n = 6) or with
thiophosphorylated I-1 (ThioP; hatched
bar; n = 6). In other cells,
thiophosphorylated I-1 was presented with the control peptide for
autocamtide-3 (2.5 mM; open bar;
n = 6). The asterisk indicates a
significant increase in EPSP slope above baseline (ANOVA,
p < 0.05).
|
|
We next asked whether the stimulation of the cAMP pathway could enable
TPS-LTP by activating CaMKII. Total and
Ca2+-independent CaMKII activities were
measured in homogenates from area CA1 of slices exposed to either TPS,
8-Br-cAMP, or both. Only the combination treatment increased
Ca2+-independent CaMKII activity in the
CA1 region above the level observed in unstimulated control slices
(Fig. 4B).
Ca2+-independent CaMKII activity was not
increased above basal by treatment of the slices with 8-Br-cAMP or TPS
alone. None of the groups differed with respect to total CaMKII
activity. Thus, the detection of coincident TPS and -adrenergic
activity, which induces LTP, is complete at the level of CaMKII.
The increase in constitutive CaMKII activity, restricted to slices
receiving both TPS and 8-Br-cAMP, is consistent with the expected
behavior of the phosphatase gate acting on CaMKII. TPS alone should
activate the CaMKII pathway [probably to a submaximal level at 10 Hz;
see Coomber (1998) ] and produce a calcineurin-dependent increase in
the activity of PP1, which would be free to dephosphorylate CaMKII. The
application of 8-Br-cAMP alone should inhibit PP1, but in the absence
of Ca2+ influx provided by TPS, no CaMKII
activation will occur. Thus, the gating model predicts an increase in
Ca2+-independent CaMKII activity only
after combined TPS and cAMP pathway stimulation, the former
contributing Ca2+ for CaMKII
autophosphorylation and the latter protecting the nascent autonomous
CaMKII activity by phosphorylating I-1 and suppressing PP1. This model
places PP1 upstream of CaMKII and predicts that phosphatase inhibition
should not overcome the blockade of TPS-LTP by a CaMKII inhibitor. We
tested this prediction by blocking postsynaptic CaMKII with
autocamtide-3 and stimulating the cell with combined TPS and
isoproterenol. This treatment blocked LTP even when PP1 was directly
inhibited by the postsynaptic injection of thiophosphorylated I-1 (Fig.
4C). The requirement for CaMKII activity despite such
aggressive inhibition of PP1 clearly indicates that CaMKII is
downstream of PP1.
TPS-induced LTP does not require increased
postsynaptic excitability
The induction of LTP by synaptic stimulation requires the pairing
of presynaptic activity with postsynaptic depolarization (Bliss and
Collingridge, 1993 ). The source of the depolarization is usually
considered to be the summation of EPSPs, particularly those mediated by
NMDA channels. A potential additional source of dendritic
depolarization is the backpropagation of action potentials from the
soma, which could contribute to LTP [Spruston et al. (1995) ; Magee and
Johnston (1997) ; but see Gustafsson et al. (1987) for evidence that
postsynaptic spiking does not contribute to LTP]. As seen in Fig. 2
and as observed in experiments on mouse hippocampus (Thomas et al.,
1998 ; Winder et al., 1999 ), spiking activity can occur during a train
of TPS.
Is an increase in postsynaptic excitability sufficient to induce LTP in
rat hippocampus? We examined this issue by comparing spiking during TPS
in cells injected with either thiophosphorylated inhibitor-1 or
inactive T35A inhibitor-1. In preliminary experiments, a stimulus
intensity adequate to induce LTP, which produced the complex field
potentials shown in Figure 2, failed to reliably induce multiple action
potentials in the recorded postsynaptic neuron during TPS. To obtain
repetitive postsynaptic firing during TPS, the stimulus intensity had
to be increased to a level sufficient for test pulses to elicit single
action potentials (Fig.
5A). However, a
comparison of the cells injected with Thio-P I-1 and T35A I-1 showed no
differences in the number of action potentials evoked by stimuli during
TPS, despite a clear group difference in the induction of LTP (Fig.
5A,B). Thus, repetitive postsynaptic firing was not
sufficient to enable TPS-induced LTP, but the additional blockade of
postsynaptic PP1 produced a lasting potentiation. In addition, because
thiophosphorylated I-1 did not increase membrane excitability, the
induction of burst firing by isoproterenol must be independent of the
inhibition of postsynaptic PP1 by the cAMP pathway.

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|
Figure 5.
The direct inhibition of postsynaptic PP1 enables
TPS-induced LTP without an increase in postsynaptic spiking.
A, Postsynaptic activity during TPS was not
increased by thiophosphorylated I-1.
A1, Samples of postsynaptic potentials
recorded just before TPS (PRE) and at every 30th
stimulus during TPS are shown. Double spikes were evoked during TPS in
both groups. Of all TPS samples recorded (n = 85),
only one stimulus produced three spikes, with all of the others
yielding one or two. Calibration: 10 mV; 10 msec.
A2, Summary of the number of spikes
produced by stimuli during TPS is shown. There were no statistically
significant differences between cells recorded with thiophosphorylated
I-1 and those recorded with T35A I-1. A patterning
effect was obtained, with the number of spikes at trace
90 significantly higher than those at traces 30 and 150 (Newman-Keuls, p < 0.01 and 0.05, respectively). B, TPS induces LTP when paired with
intracellular application of thiophosphorylated I-1. Only cells impaled
with Thio-P I-1 (n = 10) showed LTP
after TPS. The rapid induction of LTP compared with that shown in
Figure 3 is probably caused by the stronger stimulation used during TPS
(see Materials and Methods). No lasting effect on synaptic efficiency
was seen when TPS was delivered to cells impaled with electrodes
containing inactive T35A I-1 (n = 7). The inset shows sample EPSPs obtained during the
baseline period and at 60 min after TPS.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The present paper addresses some of the biochemical mechanisms
that underlie LTP induced by frequency stimulation in combination with activation of the postsynaptic cAMP pathway. From the standpoint of the widely proposed relationship between synaptic plasticity and
behavioral formation, the study of LTP induced by this pattern of
stimulation should prove valuable. Hippocampus-based memory is likely
to be better modeled by TPS-induced LTP than by the HFS protocols more
typically used, because prolonged 100 Hz trains do not occur within
natural in vivo firing patterns (Fenton and Muller, 1998 ;
Dobrunz and Stevens, 1999 ). Rather, hippocampal activity recorded in
behaving animals consists of short bursts of spikes interspersed with
relatively long, quiescent intervals. The median frequency of the
spikes within a burst, adjusted to 31°C, is ~11 Hz. The bursts are
short (<15 pulses), and the interburst intervals are in the order of
0.7 sec. Dobrunz and Stevens (1999) have shown that such stimulation
patterns, applied for 256 pulses, can induce LTP. However, our data and
those of others (Thomas et al., 1996 ; Katsuki et al., 1997 ; Winder et
al., 1999 ) suggest that the probability of LTP induction will be
enhanced by coactivation of -adrenergic receptors. Hippocampus
activity in the range, coupled with locus ceruleus
stimulation (Foote et al., 1983 ; Aston-Jones et al., 1994 ), should
provide an effective stimulus for modifying synaptic efficiency.
TPS-induced LTP has been studied in detail in mouse hippocampal slices.
However, the induction conditions and underlying mechanisms of
TPS-induced LTP appear to be quite different from those observed in rat
hippocampus. In mouse slices, a train of 150 stimuli delivered at 5 Hz
induces LTP, whereas longer trains cause depotentiation (Thomas et al.,
1996 ). These phenomena are linked to complex spike bursting that occurs
during the first 150 pulses, followed by predominantly single spikes in
response to subsequent stimuli. When isoproterenol is applied to the
mouse hippocampus, the longer trains persist in eliciting complex
spikes, and depotentiation is inhibited (Thomas et al., 1998 ). In
contrast, in rat hippocampus, 150 pulses delivered at 10 Hz do not
cause LTP on their own, nor do they evoke complex spike bursting.
Furthermore, the inhibition of postsynaptic PP1 enables TPS to induce
LTP without any increase in postsynaptic excitability. This finding
does not exclude a role for postsynaptic burst firing in the induction
of TPS-LTP; however, it indicates that some other process, which is
inhibited by PP1 activity, contributes to TPS-LTP in the rat
hippocampus. Our data suggest that this process is the regulation of
postsynaptic CaMKII activity.
Studies that used widely spaced trains of HFS in the rat
CA3 CA1 synapse have shown the importance of the indirect
regulation of CaMKII by the cAMP pathway in LTP at the rat CA3 CA1
synapse (Blitzer et al., 1995 , 1998 ). The LTP-induction model based on those results included a signaling pathway and a PP1-regulated gate,
each incorporating
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzymes. The
signaling pathway is activated by CaMKII, and the position of the gate
is determined by the balance of adenylyl cyclase activity and
calcineurin activity. When synaptic stimulation is relatively strong,
such as that used in the spaced HFS experiments, high levels of
Ca2+/calmodulin are attained that are
sufficient to activate the signaling pathway (because of CaMKII
activity) and keep the gate open (because of adenylyl cyclase activity
and consequent PP1 inhibition).
How can this model handle LTP induction by weak synaptic
stimulation paired with -adrenergic stimulation? The abilities of different patterns of stimulation to activate calcineurin and adenylyl
cyclase may offer a solution. Weak stimulation, exemplified by
low-frequency stimulation of 1 Hz, can induce LTD in area CA1 via a
calcineurin-dependent process (Mulkey et al., 1994 ). This effect is
blocked by 8-Br-cAMP, confirming an antagonistic relationship between
calcineurin and the cAMP pathway and indicating that such weak
stimulation preferentially activates calcineurin. Much stronger synaptic stimulation is needed to activate the cAMP pathway fully; e.g., widely spaced triple trains of HFS are sufficient, but a single
HFS train is not (Frey et al., 1993 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ). With weak
stimulation, the closed position of the gate would be favored, because
calcineurin is not opposed by the cAMP pathway and PP1 is active. The
concurrent activation of the cAMP pathway by some other method, such as
-adrenergic stimulation, would open the PP1 gate and permit
CaMKII-dependent signaling.
The application of the gating model to TPS-induced LTP is supported by
the results presented in this paper. These include the blockade of
TPS-LTP by inhibitors of the NMDA receptor, of CaMKII, and of PKA, the
phosphorylation of endogenous I-1 by TPS paired with either
isoproterenol or 8-Br-cAMP, the ability of postsynaptic
thiophosphorylated I-1 to substitute for -adrenergic stimulation,
and the stimulation of Ca2+-independent
CaMKII activity by TPS and 8-Br-cAMP applied together but not
separately. It thus appears that two forms of cAMP-dependent LTP, one
induced by strong synaptic stimulation and the other by more
physiologically relevant stimulation coupled with an active postsynaptic cAMP pathway, use similar mechanisms.
The gate-related effect of the cAMP pathway on CaMKII is independent of
the ability of isoproterenol to enhance burst firing during TPS (Fig.
1) (Winder et al., 1999 ), because direct postsynaptic inhibition of PP1
did not increase excitability during TPS (Fig. 5). However, these two
cAMP-dependent processes could act in concert to strengthen
postsynaptic CaMKII signaling. The backpropagation of even individual
action potentials produces dendritic Ca2+
transients in CA1 neurons (Callaway and Ross, 1995 ; Spruston et al.,
1995 ), and burst firing during a train of TPS might be expected to
substantially increase the Ca2+ signal. An
additional contribution of repetitive firing to
Ca2+ influx is suggested by the recent
demonstration of a postsynaptic Na+-dependent increase in NMDA
receptor-mediated currents (Yu and Salter, 1998 ). Under some
conditions, such as in the mouse hippocampus, the rise in dendritic
Ca2+ concentrations produced by bursting
may be sufficient to enable TPS-induced LTP, perhaps by activating
Ca2+-dependent adenylyl cyclases. The
Ca2+ entry that accompanies widely spaced
trains of HFS increases postsynaptic cAMP in this manner (Blitzer et
al., 1995 ), and the backpropagation of bursts into the dendrites during
TPS may similarly activate the cAMP pathway. However, our data in the
rat hippocampus show that the Ca2+ entry
associated with TPS-induced bursting is not adequate to enable LTP, and
additional inhibition of postsynaptic PP1 activity is necessary. It
seems reasonable that, under physiological conditions, cAMP-dependent
processes are activated to a lesser degree than that achieved in slice
experiments, so that both burst firing and phosphatase inhibition may
contribute to the role of the cAMP pathway in LTP and memory.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 26, 2000; revised Aug. 10, 2000; accepted Aug. 14, 2000.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
NS33646 to E.M.L., GM5408 to R.I., and DK5204 to S.S. and a Veterans
Administration Merit Award to E.M.L. G.P.B. is a recipient of
individual National Research Service Award GM 18887. We thank H. Schulman and A. P. Braun for samples of autocamtide-3 and control peptide.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Robert D. Blitzer, Box 1215, Department of Pharmacology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave
L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029. E-mail: rb2{at}doc.mssm.edu.
 |
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C. M. Atkins, N. Nozaki, Y. Shigeri, and T. R. Soderling
Cytoplasmic Polyadenylation Element Binding Protein-Dependent Protein Synthesis Is Regulated by Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II
J. Neurosci.,
June 2, 2004;
24(22):
5193 - 5201.
[Abstract]
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A. Kumar and T. C. Foster
Enhanced Long-Term Potentiation During Aging Is Masked by Processes Involving Intracellular Calcium Stores
J Neurophysiol,
June 1, 2004;
91(6):
2437 - 2444.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. A. Rameau, L.-Y. Chiu, and E. B. Ziff
Bidirectional Regulation of Neuronal Nitric-oxide Synthase Phosphorylation at Serine 847 by the N-Methyl-D-aspartate Receptor
J. Biol. Chem.,
April 2, 2004;
279(14):
14307 - 14314.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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H. CEULEMANS and M. BOLLEN
Functional Diversity of Protein Phosphatase-1, a Cellular Economizer and Reset Button
Physiol Rev,
January 1, 2004;
84(1):
1 - 39.
[Abstract]
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A. M. Vanhoose and D. G. Winder
NMDA and {beta}1-Adrenergic Receptors Differentially Signal Phosphorylation of Glutamate Receptor Type 1 in Area CA1 of Hippocampus
J. Neurosci.,
July 2, 2003;
23(13):
5827 - 5834.
[Abstract]
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R. B. Renden and K. Broadie
Mutation and Activation of Galpha s Similarly Alters Pre- and Postsynaptic Mechanisms Modulating Neurotransmission
J Neurophysiol,
May 1, 2003;
89(5):
2620 - 2638.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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E. J. Weeber, Y.-H. Jiang, Y. Elgersma, A. W. Varga, Y. Carrasquillo, S. E. Brown, J. M. Christian, B. Mirnikjoo, A. Silva, A. L. Beaudet, et al.
Derangements of Hippocampal Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II in a Mouse Model for Angelman Mental Retardation Syndrome
J. Neurosci.,
April 1, 2003;
23(7):
2634 - 2644.
[Abstract]
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S. N. Duffy and P. V. Nguyen
Postsynaptic Application of a Peptide Inhibitor of cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Blocks Expression of Long-Lasting Synaptic Potentiation in Hippocampal Neurons
J. Neurosci.,
February 15, 2003;
23(4):
1142 - 1150.
[Abstract]
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N. H. Woo and P. V. Nguyen
"Silent" Metaplasticity of the Late Phase of Long-Term Potentiation Requires Protein Phosphatases
Learn. Mem.,
July 1, 2002;
9(4):
202 - 213.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. H. Connor, D. C. Weiser, S. Li, J. M. Hallenbeck, and S. Shenolikar
Growth Arrest and DNA Damage-Inducible Protein GADD34 Assembles a Novel Signaling Complex Containing Protein Phosphatase 1 and Inhibitor 1
Mol. Cell. Biol.,
October 15, 2001;
21(20):
6841 - 6850.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. G. Giovannini, R. D. Blitzer, T. Wong, K. Asoma, P. Tsokas, J. H. Morrison, R. Iyengar, and E. M. Landau
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Regulates Early Phosphorylation and Delayed Expression of Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II in Long-Term Potentiation
J. Neurosci.,
September 15, 2001;
21(18):
7053 - 7062.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. F. Reis, M. B. Lee, A. S. Huang, and K. D. Parfitt
Adenylate Cyclase-Mediated Forms of Neuronal Plasticity in Hippocampal Area CA1 Are Reduced With Aging
J Neurophysiol,
June 1, 2005;
93(6):
3381 - 3389.
[Abstract]
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