Abstract

The striatum receives extensive cortical input and plays a prominent role in motor learning and habit formation. Glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor (NMDAR)-mediated long-term potentiation (LTP) is a major synaptic plasticity involved in learning and memory. However, the molecular mechanism underlying NMDAR plasticity in corticostriatal LTP is unclear. Here, we show that theta-burst stimulation (TBS) consistently induced corticostriatal LTP and increased the coincident presynaptic and postsynaptic NMDAR activity of medium spiny neurons. We also found that α2δ-1 (previously known as a subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels; encoded by the Cacna2d1 gene) physically interacted with NMDARs in the striatum of mice and humans, indicating that this cross-talk is conserved across species. Strikingly, inhibiting α2δ-1 trafficking with gabapentin or disrupting the α2δ-1-NMDAR interaction with an α2δ-1 C terminus-interfering peptide abolished TBS-induced LTP. In Cacna2d1-knockout mice, TBS failed to induce corticostriatal LTP and the associated increases in presynaptic and postsynaptic NMDAR activities. Moreover, systemic gabapentin treatment, microinjection of α2δ-1 C terminus-interfering peptide into the dorsomedial striatum, or Cacna2d1 ablation impaired the alternation T-maze task and rotarod performance in mice. Our findings indicate that the interaction between α2δ-1 and NMDARs is of high physiological relevance and that a TBS-induced switch from α2δ-1-free to α2δ-1-bound NMDARs is critically involved in corticostriatal LTP and LTP-associated learning and memory. Gabapentinoids at high doses may adversely affect cognitive function by targeting α2δ-1-NMDAR complexes.

Highlights

  • The striatum receives extensive cortical input and plays a prominent role in motor learning and habit formation

  • Our findings indicate that the interaction between ␣2␦-1 and NMDARs is of high physiological relevance and that a theta-burst stimulation (TBS)-induced switch from ␣2␦-1–free to ␣2␦-1– bound NMDARs is critically involved in corticostriatal long-term potentiation (LTP) and LTP-associated learning and memory

  • TBS (10 trains of stimuli spaced at 10-s intervals, with each train containing bursts of 4 spikes at 100 Hz, repeated 10 times at 5 Hz) [8] in cortical layer VI reliably induced a profound increase in the amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in all medium spiny neurons (MSNs) after a latency of ϳ10 min; this increase lasted for at least 80 min (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The striatum receives extensive cortical input and plays a prominent role in motor learning and habit formation. We show that theta-burst stimulation (TBS) consistently induced corticostriatal LTP and increased the coincident presynaptic and postsynaptic NMDAR activity of medium spiny neurons. In Cacna2d1-knockout mice, TBS failed to induce corticostriatal LTP and the associated increases in presynaptic and postsynaptic NMDAR activities. Our findings indicate that the interaction between ␣2␦-1 and NMDARs is of high physiological relevance and that a TBS-induced switch from ␣2␦-1–free to ␣2␦-1– bound NMDARs is critically involved in corticostriatal LTP and LTP-associated learning and memory. Cortical input to MSNs in the striatum is involved in the early formation of working memory, which critically depends on synaptic NMDARs [11,12,13]. The molecular mechanism responsible for changes in synaptic NMDAR activity during corticostriatal LTP induction remains poorly understood. We present our new findings that ␣2␦-1 is essential for corticostriatal LTP and the associated increase in the presynaptic and post-

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