Abstract

Research has identified several transcription factors that regulate activity-dependent plasticity and memory, with cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB) being the most well-studied. In neurons, CREB activation is influenced by the transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), considered central to immunity but more recently implicated in memory. The transcription factor early growth response-2 (Egr-2), an NF-κB gene target, is also associated with learning and memory. Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2), an antioxidant transcription factor linked to NF-κB in pathological conditions, has not been studied in normal memory. Given that numerous transcription factors implicated in activity-dependent plasticity demonstrate connections to NF-κB, this study simultaneously evaluated protein levels of NF-κB, CREB, Egr-2, Nrf2, and actin in hippocampi from young (1 month-old) weanling CD1 mice after training in the Morris water maze, a hippocampal-dependent spatial memory task. After a 6-day acquisition period, time to locate the hidden platform decreased in the Morris water maze. Mice spent more time in the target vs. non-target quadrants of the maze, suggestive of recall of the platform location. Western blot data revealed a decrease in NF-κB p50 protein after training relative to controls, whereas NF-κB p65, Nrf2 and actin increased. Nrf2 levels were correlated with platform crosses in nearly all tested animals. These data demonstrate that training in a spatial memory task results in alterations in and associations with particular transcription factors in the hippocampus, including upregulation of NF-κB p65 and Nrf2. Training-induced increases in actin protein levels caution against its use as a loading control in immunoblot studies examining activity-dependent plasticity, learning, and memory.

Highlights

  • The formation of various forms of memory is regulated by distinct neurobiological mechanisms

  • The present study simultaneously evaluated changes associated with Morris water maze (MWM) training in levels of three transcription factors previously implicated in memory

  • This study revealed modifications in the levels of transcription factors associated with MWM-training in CD1 mice, including parallel elevations in Nuclear factor kappa b (NF-κB) p65 and Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2), unlike the expression pattern seen in the literature far in pathological conditions

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Summary

Introduction

The formation of various forms of memory is regulated by distinct neurobiological mechanisms. The formation of long-term (across hours to days), but not short-term (across minutes), memory is associated with protein synthesis (Davis and Squire, 1984; Kandel, 2001; Alberini, 2009). The importance of CREB in longterm memory (LTM) has been demonstrated in Drosophila melanogaster (Yin et al, 1994) as well as mammals, including mice (Bourtchuladze et al, 1994) and rats (Josselyn et al, 2001). These data, suggest a phylogenetically conserved role for CREB in LTM formation

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