GluA2-dependent AMPA receptor endocytosis and the decay of early and late long-term potentiation: possible mechanisms for forgetting of short- and long-term memories |
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Authors: | Oliver Hardt Karim Nader Yu-Tian Wang |
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Institution: | 1.Centre for Cognitive and Neural Systems, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;2.Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montréal, Canada;3.Brain Research Center, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada |
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Abstract: | The molecular processes involved in establishing long-term potentiation (LTP) have been characterized well, but the decay of early and late LTP (E-LTP and L-LTP) is poorly understood. We review recent advances in describing the mechanisms involved in maintaining LTP and homeostatic plasticity. We discuss how these phenomena could relate to processes that might underpin the loss of synaptic potentiation over time, and how they might contribute to the forgetting of short-term and long-term memories. We propose that homeostatic downscaling mediates the loss of E-LTP, and that metaplastic parameters determine the decay rate of L-LTP, while both processes require the activity-dependent removal of postsynaptic GluA2-containing AMPA receptors. |
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Keywords: | long-term potentiation decay homeostatic scaling metaplasticity forgetting |
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