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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Learning & Memory, 11(21), p. 616-626, 2014

DOI: 10.1101/lm.035972.114

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Long-term potentiation can be induced in the CA1 region of hippocampus in the absence of αCaMKII T286-autophosphorylation

Journal article published in 2014 by Agnès Villers, Karl Peter Giese ORCID, Laurence Ris
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

α-calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (αCaMKII) T286-autophosphorylation provides a short-term molecular memory that was thought to be required for LTP and for learning and memory. However, it has been shown that learning can occur in αCaMKII-T286A mutant mice after a massed training protocol. This raises the question of whether there might be a form of LTP in these mice that can occur without T286 autophosphorylation. In this study, we confirmed that in CA1 pyramidal cells, LTP induced in acute hippocampal slices, after a recovery period in an interface chamber, is strictly dependent on postsynaptic αCaMKII autophosphorylation. However, we demonstrated that αCaMKII-autophosphorylation-independent plasticity can occur in the hippocampus but at the expense of synaptic specificity. This nonspecific LTP was observed in mutant and wild-type mice after a recovery period in a submersion chamber and was independent of NMDA receptors. Moreover, when slices prepared from mutant mice were preincubated during 2 h with rapamycin, high-frequency trains induced a synapse-specific LTP which was added to the nonspecific LTP. This specific LTP was related to an increase in the duration and the amplitude of NMDA receptor-mediated response induced by rapamycin.