Abstract

Protein kinases play critical roles in learning and memory and in long term potentiation (LTP), a form of synaptic plasticity. The induction of late-phase LTP (L-LTP) in the CA1 region of the hippocampus requires several kinases, including CaMKII and PKA, which are activated by calcium-dependent signaling processes and other intracellular signaling pathways. The requirement for PKA is limited to L-LTP induced using spaced stimuli, but not massed stimuli. To investigate this temporal sensitivity of PKA, a computational biochemical model of L-LTP induction in CA1 pyramidal neurons was developed. The model describes the interactions of calcium and cAMP signaling pathways and is based on published biochemical measurements of two key synaptic signaling molecules, PKA and CaMKII. The model is stimulated using four 100 Hz tetani separated by 3 sec (massed) or 300 sec (spaced), identical to experimental L-LTP induction protocols. Simulations show that spaced stimulation activates more PKA than massed stimulation, and makes a key experimental prediction, that L-LTP is PKA-dependent for intervals larger than 60 sec. Experimental measurements of L-LTP demonstrate that intervals of 80 sec, but not 40 sec, produce PKA-dependent L-LTP, thereby confirming the model prediction. Examination of CaMKII reveals that its temporal sensitivity is opposite that of PKA, suggesting that PKA is required after spaced stimulation to compensate for a decrease in CaMKII. In addition to explaining the temporal sensitivity of PKA, these simulations suggest that the use of several kinases for memory storage allows each to respond optimally to different temporal patterns.

Highlights

  • Synaptic plasticity, the activity-dependent change in the strength of neuronal connections, is a cellular mechanism proposed to underlie memory storage

  • We developed a computational model to evaluate whether the signaling pathways leading to activation of the two critical enzymes: protein kinase A and calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinase II are sufficient to explain the experimentally observed temporal sensitivity

  • The simulations demonstrate that these enzymes exhibit different temporal sensitivities, and make a key experimental prediction, that L-long term potentiation (LTP) is dependent on protein kinase A for intervals larger than 60 sec

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Summary

Introduction

The activity-dependent change in the strength of neuronal connections, is a cellular mechanism proposed to underlie memory storage. Late-phase LTP (L-LTP) is induced by 4 trains of stimulation separated by either 3–20 sec (massed) or 300–600 sec (spaced), lasts more than 3 hours, and requires protein synthesis [1]. The temporal spacing between successive trains regulates the PKA-dependence of L-LTP [2,3]. A spaced protocol (using a 300 sec inter-train interval) requires PKA, whereas massed protocols (using 20 sec and 3 sec intervals) induce LLTP that is independent of PKA. The mechanisms underlying this temporal sensitivity of PKA dependence are not understood

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