Login / Signup

Compensation for PKMζ in long-term potentiation and spatial long-term memory in mutant mice.

Panayiotis TsokasChangchi HsiehYudong YaoEdith LesburguèresEmma Jane Claire WallaceAndrew TcherepanovDesingarao JothianandanBenjamin Rush HartleyLing PanBruno RivardRobert V FareseMini P SajanPeter John BergoldAlejandro Iván HernándezJames E CottrellHarel Z ShouvalAndré Antonio FentonTodd Charlton Sacktor
Published in: eLife (2016)
PKMζ is a persistently active PKC isoform proposed to maintain late-LTP and long-term memory. But late-LTP and memory are maintained without PKMζ in PKMζ-null mice. Two hypotheses can account for these findings. First, PKMζ is unimportant for LTP or memory. Second, PKMζ is essential for late-LTP and long-term memory in wild-type mice, and PKMζ-null mice recruit compensatory mechanisms. We find that whereas PKMζ persistently increases in LTP maintenance in wild-type mice, PKCι/λ, a gene-product closely related to PKMζ, persistently increases in LTP maintenance in PKMζ-null mice. Using a pharmacogenetic approach, we find PKMζ-antisense in hippocampus blocks late-LTP and spatial long-term memory in wild-type mice, but not in PKMζ-null mice without the target mRNA. Conversely, a PKCι/λ-antagonist disrupts late-LTP and spatial memory in PKMζ-null mice but not in wild-type mice. Thus, whereas PKMζ is essential for wild-type LTP and long-term memory, persistent PKCι/λ activation compensates for PKMζ loss in PKMζ-null mice.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • high fat diet induced
  • working memory
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • insulin resistance
  • adipose tissue
  • brain injury
  • genome wide
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage