Protein Kinase M Maintains Long-term Sensitization and Long-term Facilitation in Aplysia
Overview
Affiliations
How the brain maintains long-term memories is one of the major outstanding questions in modern neuroscience. Evidence from mammalian studies indicates that activity of a protein kinase C (PKC) isoform, protein kinase Mζ (PKMζ), plays a critical role in the maintenance of long-term memory. But the range of memories whose persistence depends on PKMζ, and the mechanisms that underlie the effect of PKMζ on long-term memory, remain obscure. Recently, a PKM isoform, known as PKM Apl III, was cloned from the nervous system of Aplysia. Here, we tested whether PKM Apl III plays a critical role in long-term memory maintenance in Aplysia. Intrahemocoel injections of the pseudosubstrate inhibitory peptide ZIP (ζ inhibitory peptide) or the PKC inhibitor chelerythrine erased the memory for long-term sensitization (LTS) of the siphon-withdrawal reflex (SWR) as late as 7 d after training. In addition, both PKM inhibitors disrupted the maintenance of long-term (≥ 24 h) facilitation (LTF) of the sensorimotor synapse, a form of synaptic plasticity previously shown to mediate LTS of the SWR. Together with previous results (Bougie et al., 2009), our results support the idea that long-term memory in Aplysia is maintained via a positive-feedback loop involving PKM Apl III-dependent protein phosphorylation. The present data extend the known role of PKM in memory maintenance to a simple and well studied type of long-term learning. Furthermore, the demonstration that PKM activity underlies the persistence of LTF of the Aplysia sensorimotor synapse, a form of synaptic plasticity amenable to rigorous cellular and molecular analyses, should facilitate efforts to understand how PKM activity maintains memory.
Zuzina A, Kolotova D, Balaban P Cells. 2024; 13(22).
PMID: 39594599 PMC: 11592888. DOI: 10.3390/cells13221850.
Ehweiner A, Duch C, Brembs B F1000Res. 2024; 13:116.
PMID: 38779314 PMC: 11109550. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.146347.1.
Remapping revisited: how the hippocampus represents different spaces.
Fenton A Nat Rev Neurosci. 2024; 25(6):428-448.
PMID: 38714834 DOI: 10.1038/s41583-024-00817-x.
Franzen A, Paulsen R, Kabeiseman E, Burrell B J Neurophysiol. 2023; 129(4):807-818.
PMID: 36883763 PMC: 10085563. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00494.2022.
Augereau K, Migues P, Hardt O Front Behav Neurosci. 2022; 16:1007748.
PMID: 36560931 PMC: 9763881. DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.1007748.