Protein Phosphatases Mediate Depotentiation Induced by High-Intensity Theta-Burst Stimulation
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 89 (2) , 684-690
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.01041.2001
Abstract
We have previously reported that varying stimulus intensity produces qualitatively different types of synaptic plasticity in area CA1 of hippocampal slices: brief low-intensity (LI) theta-burst (TB) stimuli induce long-term potentiation (LTP), but if the stimulus intensity is increased (to mimic conditions that may exist during seizures), LTP is not induced; instead, high-intensity (HI) TB stimuli erase previously induced LTP (“TB depotentiation”). We now have explored the mechanisms underlying TB depotentiation using extracellular field recordings with pharmacological manipulations. We found that TB depotentiation was blocked by okadaic acid and calyculin A (inhibitors of serine/threonine protein phosphatases PP1 and PP2A), FK506 (a specific blocker of calcineurin, a Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM) protein phosphatase), and 8-Br-cAMP (an activator of protein kinase A) with 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor). These results suggest that protein phosphatase pathways are involved in the TB depotentiation similar to other type of down-regulating synaptic plasticity such as low-frequency stimulation (LFS)-induced long-term depression (LTD) and depotentiation in the rat hippocampus. However, TB depotentiation and LFS depotentiation could have differential functional significance.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synaptic plasticity: LTP and LTDPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Protein phosphatase 1 is a molecular constraint on learning and memoryNature, 2002
- Bidirectional Synaptic Plasticity Correlated With the Magnitude of Dendritic Calcium Transients Above a ThresholdJournal of Neurophysiology, 2001
- Protein Phosphatase-1 Regulation in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation: Heterogeneous Molecular MechanismsJournal of Neuroscience, 2000
- Gating of CaMKII by cAMP-Regulated Protein Phosphatase Activity During LTPScience, 1998
- Regulatory Phosphorylation of AMPA-Type Glutamate Receptors by CaM-KII During Long-Term PotentiationScience, 1997
- Postsynaptic CAMP pathway gates early LTP in hippocampal CA1 regionNeuron, 1995
- Induction and reversal of long-term potentiation by low- and high- intensity theta pattern stimulationJournal of Neuroscience, 1995
- A synaptic model of memory: long-term potentiation in the hippocampusNature, 1993
- Distinct interactions between Ca2+/calmodulin and neurotransmitter stimulation of adenylate cyclase in striatum and hippocampusCellular and Molecular Neurobiology, 1988