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1.
Cell and molecular analysis of long-term sensitization in Aplysia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have found that one cellular locus for the storage of the memory underlying short-term sensitization of the gill and siphon withdrawal reflex in Aplysia is the set of monosynaptic connections between the siphon sensory cells and the gill and siphon motor neurons. These connections also participate in the storage of memory underlying long-term sensitization. In animals that have undergone long-term sensitization, the amplitudes of the monosynaptic connections are significantly larger (2.2x) than the ones in control animals. To study the mechanisms of onset and retention of long-term synaptic facilitation that underly long-term sensitization and the role of protein synthesis in long-term memory, we have developed two types of reduced preparations: the intact reflex isolated from the remainder of the animal, and a dissociated cell culture system in which the monosynaptic component (sensory neurons and motor neurons) of the neuronal circuit mediating the withdrawal reflex is reconstituted. We found that protein synthesis inhibitors, such as anisomycin or emetine, and RNA synthesis inhibitors, such as actinomycin D or alpha-amanitin, blocked long-term facilitation without interfering with short-term facilitation. These results suggest that the acquisition of long-term memory may require the expression of genes and the synthesis of proteins not needed for short-term memory.  相似文献   

2.
Synaptic connections between the sensory and motor neurons of Aplysia in culture undergo long-term facilitation in response to serotonin (5-HT) and long-term depression in response to FMRFamide. These long-term functional changes are dependent on the synthesis of macromolecules during the period in which the transmitter is applied and are accompanied by structural changes. There is an increase and a decrease, respectively, in the number of sensory neuron varicosities in response to 5-HT and FMRFamide. To determine whether macromolecular synthesis is also required for the structural changes, we examined in parallel the effects of inhibitors of protein (anisomycin) or RNA (actinomycin D) synthesis on the structural and functional changes. We have found that anisomycin and actinomycin D block both the enduring alterations in varicosity number and the long-lasting changes in synaptic potential. These results indicate that macromolecular synthesis is required for expression of the long-lasting structural changes in the sensory cells and that this synthesis is correlated with the long-term functional modulation of sensorimotor synapses.  相似文献   

3.
Protein synthesis at synaptic terminals contributes to LTP in hippocampus and to the formation of new synaptic connections by sensory neurons (SNs) of Aplysia. Here we report that after removal of the SN cell body, isolated SN synapses of Aplysia in culture express protein-synthesis dependent long-term facilitation (LTF) produced by 5-HT that decays rapidly. Changes in expression of a SN-specific neuropeptide sensorin in isolated SN varicosities parallel the changes in synaptic efficacy. At 24 h after 5-HT the magnitude of LTF produced at isolated SN synapses was significantly greater than that produced when SN cell bodies were present. LTF was maintained at 48 h at connections with SN cell bodies, but not at isolated SN synapses. The increase in synaptic efficacy at isolated SN synapses at 24 h was blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin. LTF was accompanied by changes in expression of sensorin. The increase in sensorin level at isolated SN varicosities with 5-HT was blocked by anisomycin or was reversed 48 h after 5-HT treatment alone. The results suggest that, as is the case for initial synapse formation between SNs and L7, changes in protein synthesis at synaptic terminals may contribute directly to LTF of stable synapses. Changes in expression within the cell body provide additional contributions for long-term maintenance of the new level of synaptic efficacy that was initiated directly by local changes in protein synthesis at or near synaptic terminals.  相似文献   

4.
Long-term memory for sensitization of the gill- and siphon-withdrawal reflex in Aplysia, produced by 4 days of training, is associated with increased synaptic efficacy of the connection between the sensory and motor neurons. This training is also accompanied by neuronal growth; there is an increase in the number of synaptic varicosities per sensory neuron and in the number of active zones. Such structural changes may be due to changes in the rates of synthesis of certain proteins. We have searched for proteins in which the rates of [35S]methionine labeling are altered during the maintenance phase of long-term memory for sensitization by using computer-assisted quantitative 2-D gel analysis. This method has allowed us to detect 4 proteins in which labeling is altered after 4 days of sensitization training.  相似文献   

5.
6.
To investigate further the cellular mechanisms underlying long-term facilitation (LTF) and long-term synapse-specific facilitation (LTSSF), we studied the role of axonal transport and somatic and synaptic protein synthesis at proximal and distal synapses of Aplysia siphon sensory neurons (SNs). The long soma-synapse distances (2.5 to 3 cm) of the SN distal synapses impose important temporal and mechanistic constraints on long-term facilitation and on intracellular signaling. Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked by SNs in central and peripheral siphon motor neurons were used to assay LTF 24-30 h after various pharmacological treatments. Inhibition of protein synthesis via anisomycin application at either the SN soma or distal synapses blocked the induction of LTF and LTSSF normally produced by synaptic application of the facilitating transmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine). Further, disruption of axonal transport by application of nocodazole to the isolated siphon nerve completely blocked LTF at distal synapses. These results indicate an essential role for somatic and synaptic protein synthesis and active axonal transport in LTSSF at distal synapses, and raise intriguing questions for current synaptic marking/capture models of synapse specificity and LTF.  相似文献   

7.
The discovery that dendrites of neurons in the mammalian brain possess the capacity for protein synthesis stimulated interest in the potential role of local, postsynaptic protein synthesis in learning-related synaptic plasticity. But it remains unclear how local, postsynaptic protein synthesis actually mediates learning and memory in mammals. Accordingly, we examined whether learning in an invertebrate, the marine snail Aplysia, involves local, postsynaptic protein synthesis. Previously, we showed that the dishabituation and sensitization of the defensive withdrawal reflex in Aplysia require elevated postsynaptic Ca(2+), postsynaptic exocytosis, and functional upregulation of postsynaptic alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA)-type glutamate receptors. Here, we tested whether the synaptic facilitation that underlies dishabituation and sensitization in Aplysia requires local, postsynaptic protein synthesis. We found that the facilitatory transmitter, serotonin (5-HT), enhanced the response of the motor neuron to glutamate, the sensory neuron transmitter, and this enhancement depended on rapid protein synthesis. By using individual motor neurites surgically isolated from their cell bodies, we showed that the 5-HT-dependent protein synthesis occurred locally. Finally, by blocking postsynaptic protein synthesis, we disrupted the facilitation of the sensorimotor synapse. By demonstrating its critical role in a synaptic change that underlies learning and memory in a major model invertebrate system, our study suggests that local, postsynaptic protein synthesis is of fundamental importance to the cell biology of learning.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The time course of the requirement for local protein synthesis in the stabilization of learning-related synaptic growth and the persistence of long-term memory was examined using Aplysia bifurcated sensory neuron-motor neuron cultures. We find that, following repeated pulses of serotonin (5-HT), the local perfusion of emetine, an inhibitor of protein synthesis, or a TAT-AS oligonucleotide directed against ApCPEB blocks long-term facilitation (LTF) at either 24 or 48 hr and leads to a selective retraction of newly formed sensory neuron varicosities induced by 5-HT. By contrast, later inhibition of local protein synthesis, at 72 hr after 5-HT, has no effect on either synaptic growth or LTF. These results define a specific stabilization phase for the storage of long-term memory during which newly formed varicosities are labile and require sustained CPEB-dependent local protein synthesis to acquire the more stable properties of mature varicosities required for the persistence of LTF.  相似文献   

10.
Serotonin (5-HT) and the neuropeptide Phe-Met-Arg-Phe-amide (FMRFa) modulate synaptic efficacy of sensory neurons (SNs) of Aplysia in opposite directions and for long duration. Both long-term responses require changes in mRNA and protein synthesis. The SN-specific neuropeptide, sensorin A, is a gene product that appears to be increased by 5-HT and decreased by FMRFa. We examined whether changes in sensorin A mRNA levels in the cell body and neurites of SNs accompany long-term facilitation and depression. Both 5-HT and FMRFa evoked rapid changes in sensorin A mRNA levels in the SN cell bodies: an increase with 5-HT and a decrease with FMRFa. Parallel changes in sensorin A mRNA levels in SN neurites were detected 2 h and 4 h later. These rapid changes in mRNA expression and net export required the presence of the appropriate target motor cell L7. The neuromodulators failed to produce changes in mRNA expression or export when SNs were cultured alone or with the inappropriate target cell L11. The changes in mRNA expression were transient because mRNA levels returned to control values 24 h after treatment, while synaptic efficacy remained altered by the respective treatments. These results indicate that two neuromodulators produce distinct, but transient, target-dependent effects on expression and export of a cell-specific mRNA that correlate with changes in synaptic plasticity.  相似文献   

11.
Although feeding in Aplysia is mediated by a central pattern generator (CPG), the activity of this CPG is modified by afferent input. To determine how afferent activity produces the widespread changes in motor programs that are necessary if behavior is to be modified, we have studied two classes of feeding sensory neurons. We have shown that afferent-induced changes in activity are widespread because sensory neurons make a number of synaptic connections. For example, sensory neurons make monosynaptic excitatory connections with feeding motor neurons. Sensori-motor transmission is, however, regulated so that changes in the periphery do not disrupt ongoing activity. This results from the fact that sensory neurons are also electrically coupled to feeding interneurons. During motor programs sensory neurons are, therefore, rhythmically depolarized via central input. These changes in membrane potential profoundly affect sensori-motor transmission. For example, changes in membrane potential alter spike propagation in sensory neurons so that spikes are only actively transmitted to particular output regions when it is behaviorally appropriate. To summarize, afferent activity alters motor output because sensory neurons make direct contact with motor neurons. Sensori-motor transmission is, however, centrally regulated so that changes in the periphery alter motor programs in a phase-dependent manner.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Long-term memory for sensitization in Aplysia requires new protein and RNA synthesis. Here, we identify a late protein as calreticulin, the major Ca(2+)-binding protein of the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. An antiserum against Aplysia calreticulin reveals an enrichment of calreticulin immunoreactivity in presynaptic varicosities. Quantitative S1 nuclease analysis indicates that the steady-state level of calreticulin mRNA in Aplysia sensory neurons increases during the maintenance phase of long-term sensitization. The finding that this mRNA increases in expression late, some time after training, is consistent with the idea that long-term neuromodulatory changes underlying sensitization may depend on a cascade of gene expression in which the induction of early regulatory genes leads to the expression of late effector genes.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation of glutamate transporters accompanies plasticity of some glutamatergic synapses. The regulation of glutamate uptake at the Aplysia sensorimotor synapse during long-term facilitation (LTF) was investigated. Previously, increases in levels of ApGT1 ( Aplysia glutamate transporter 1) in synaptic membranes were found to be related to long-term increases in glutamate uptake. In this study, we found that regulation of ApGT1 during LTF appears to occur post-translationally. Serotonin (5-HT) a transmitter that induces LTF did not increase synthesis of ApGT1. A pool of ApGT1 appears to exist in sensory neuron somata, which is transported to the terminals by axonal transport. Blocking the rough endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi-trans-Golgi network (TGN) pathway with Brefeldin A prevented the 5-HT-induced increase of ApGT1 in terminals. Also, 5-HT produced changes in post-translational modifications of ApGT1 as well as changes in the levels of an ApGT1-co-precipitating protein. These results suggest that regulation of trafficking of ApGT1 from the vesicular trafficking system (rough endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi-TGN) in the sensory neuron somata to the terminals by post-translational modifications and protein interactions appears to be the mechanism underlying the increase in ApGT1, and thus, glutamate uptake during memory formation.  相似文献   

15.
The monosynaptic component of the neuronal circuit that mediates the withdrawal reflex of Aplysia californica can be reconstituted in dissociated cell culture. Study of these in vitro monosynaptic connections has yielded insights into the basic cellular mechanisms of synaptogenesis and long-term synaptic plasticity. One such insight has been that the development of the presynaptic sensory neurons is strongly regulated by the postsynaptic motor neuron. Sensory neurons which have been cocultured with a target motor neuron have more elaborate structures—characterized by neurites with more branches and varicosities—than do sensory neurons grown alone in culture or sensory neurons that have been cocultured with an inappropriate target cell. Another way in which the motor neuron regulates the development of sensory neurons is apparent when sensorimotor cocultures with two presynaptic cells are examined. In such cocultures the outgrowth from the different presynaptic cells is obviously segregated on the processes of the postsynaptic cell. By contrast, when two sensory neurons are placed into cell culture without a motor neuron, thier processes readily grow together. In addition to regulating the in vitro development of sensory neurons, the motor neuron also regulates learning-related changes in the structure of sensory neurons. Application of the endogenous facilitatory trasmitter serotonin (5-HT) causes long-term facilitation of in vitro sensorimotor synapses due in part to growth of new presynatpic varicosities. But 5-HT applied to sensory neurons alone in cultuer does not produce structural changes in these cells. More recently it has been found that sensorimotor synapses in cell culture can exhibit long-term potentiation (LTP). Like LTP of some hippocampal synapses, LTP of in vitro Aplysia syanpses is regulated by the voltage of the postsynaptic cell. Pairing high-frequency stimulation of sensory neurons with strong hyperpolarization of the motor neuron blocks the induction of LTP. Moreover, LTP of sensorimotor synapses can be induced in Hebbian fashion by pairing weak presynaptic stimulation with strong postsynaptic depolarization. These findings implicate a Habbian mechanism in classical conditioning in Aplysia. They also indicate that Hebbian LTP is a phylogenetically ancient form of synaptic plasticity. 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
S Schacher  P G Montarolo 《Neuron》1991,6(5):679-690
FMRFamide evokes both short-term and long-term inhibition of synapses between mechanosensory and motor neurons in Aplysia. We report here, using dissociated cell culture and low-light epifluorescence video microscopy, that depression lasting 24 hr of sensorimotor synapses evoked by four brief applications of FMRFamide is accompanied by a significant loss of sensory cell varicosities and neurites. These structural changes in the sensory cells require the presence of the target motor cell L7. Because the loss of structures known to contain transmitter release sites correlates significantly with the changes in the amplitude of the excitatory postsynaptic potential in L7, our results suggest that the structural changes evoked by FMRFamide reflect a loss of synaptic contacts. Thus, long-term depression parallels long-term facilitation of the sensorimotor synapse produced by serotonin in that both forms of heterosynaptic plasticity involve target-dependent modulation of the number of presynaptic varicosities.  相似文献   

17.
Long-term memory for sensitization of the gill-withdrawal reflex in Aplysia is associated with the growth of new synaptic connections between sensory and motor neurons. The duration of this structural change parallels the behavioral retention of the memory. Such changes can be reconstituted in dissociated cell culture by repeated presentations of the modulatory neurotransmitter serotonin (5HT) and are associated with an activity-dependent downregulation of NCAM-related cell adhesion molecules thought to contribute to cell recognition and axonal outgrowth during development. Thus, aspects of the mechanisms utilized for learning-related synaptic growth initiated by experience in the adult may eventually be understood in the context of the molecular logic that shapes synaptic circuitry during the later stages of neuronal development.  相似文献   

18.
Sutton MA  Masters SE  Bagnall MW  Carew TJ 《Neuron》2001,31(1):143-154
Short- and long-term synaptic facilitation induced by serotonin at Aplysia sensory-motor (SN-MN) synapses has been widely used as a cellular model of short- and long-term memory for sensitization. In recent years, a distinct intermediate phase of synaptic facilitation (ITF) has been described at SN-MN synapses. Here, we identify a novel intermediate phase of behavioral memory (ITM) for sensitization in Aplysia and demonstrate that it shares the temporal and mechanistic features of ITF in the intact CNS: (1) it declines completely prior to the onset of LTM, (2) its induction requires protein but not RNA synthesis, and (3) its expression requires the persistent activation of protein kinase A. Thus, in Aplysia, the same temporal and molecular characteristics that distinguish ITF from other phases of synaptic plasticity distinguish ITM from other phases of behavioral memory.  相似文献   

19.
The Trk family of receptor tyrosine kinases plays a role in synaptic plasticity and in behavioral memory in mammals. Here, we report the discovery of a Trk-like receptor, ApTrkl, in Aplysia. We show that it is expressed in the sensory neurons, the locus for synaptic facilitation, which is a cellular model for memory formation. Serotonin, the facilitatory neurotransmitter, activates ApTrkl, which, in turn, leads to activation of ERK. Finally, inhibiting the activation of ApTrkl with the Trk inhibitor K252a or using dsRNA to inhibit ApTrkl blocks the serotonin-mediated activation of ERK in the cell body, as well as the cell-wide long-term facilitation induced by 5-HT application to the cell body. Thus, transactivation of the receptor tyrosine kinase ApTrkl by serotonin is an essential step in the biochemical events leading to long-term facilitation in Aplysia.  相似文献   

20.
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