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Article Dans Une Revue Nature Année : 1998

Enhanced long-term potentiation and impaired learning in mice with mutant postsynaptic density-95 protein

Résumé

Specific patterns of neuronal firing induce changes in synaptic strength that may contribute to learning and memory. If the postsynaptic NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors are blocked, long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) of synaptic transmission and the learning of spatial information are prevented. The NMDA receptor can bind a protein known as postsynaptic density-95 (PSD-95), which may regulate the localization of and/or signalling by the receptor. In mutant mice lacking PSD-95, the frequency function of NMDA-dependent LTP and LTD is shifted to produce strikingly enhanced LTP at different frequencies of synaptic stimulation. In keeping with neural-network models that incorporate bidirectional learning rules, this frequency shift is accompanied by severely impaired spatial learning. Synaptic NMDA-receptor currents, subunit expression, localization and synaptic morphology are all unaffected in the mutant mice. PSD-95 thus appears to be important in coupling the NMDA receptor to pathways that control bidirectional synaptic plasticity and learning.

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Autre [q-bio.OT]
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Dates et versions

hal-01601288 , version 1 (02-10-2017)

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Martine Migaud, P. Charlesworth, M. Dempster, L.C. Webster, A.M. Watabe, et al.. Enhanced long-term potentiation and impaired learning in mice with mutant postsynaptic density-95 protein. Nature, 1998, 396 (6710), pp.433-439. ⟨10.1038/24790⟩. ⟨hal-01601288⟩
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