4.7 Article

Arc Regulates Experience-Dependent Persistent Firing Patterns in Frontal Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 19, Pages 6583-6595

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0167-14.2014

Keywords

Arc/Arg3.1; experience dependent; frontal cortex; NMDA receptor; persistent activity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Intramural Research Program
  2. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression Young Investigator Award
  3. NIMH Division of Intramural Research Programs
  4. Genes Cognition and Psychosis Program

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The brain encodes information about past experience in specific populations of neurons that communicate with one another by firing action potentials. Studies of experience-dependent neural plasticity have largely focused on individual synaptic changes in response to neuronal input. Indicative of the neuronal output transmitted to downstream neurons, persistent firing patterns are affected by prior experience in selective neuronal populations. However, little is known about the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which experience-related persistent firing patterns are regulated in specific neuronal populations. Using frontal cortical slices prepared from transgenic mice carrying a fluorescent reporter of Arc gene expression, this study investigates how behavioral experience and the activity-regulated Arc gene affect patterns of neuronal firing. We found that motor training increases Arc expression in subsets of excitatory neurons. Those neurons exhibit persistent firing in contrast to Arc-negative neurons from the same mice or neurons from the untrained mice. Furthermore, in mice carrying genetic deletion of Arc, the frontal cortical circuitry is still in place to initiate experience-dependent gene expression, but the level of persistent firing thereafter is diminished. Finally, our results showed that the emergence of persistent activity is associated with Arc-dependent changes in the function of NMDA-type glutamate receptors, rather than changes in AMPA-type receptors or membrane excitability. Our findings therefore reveal an Arc-dependent molecular pathway by which geneexperience interaction regulates the emergence of persistent firing patterns in specific neuronal populations.

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