4.3 Article

Mechanisms of mGluR-dependent plasticity in hippocampal area CA2

Journal

HIPPOCAMPUS
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 730-744

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hipo.23529

Keywords

hippocampus; long-term depression; RGS14; social recognition memory; synaptic plasticity

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Pyramidal cells in hippocampal area CA2 have distinct synaptic properties, including a lack of typical long-term potentiation. This study investigated the role of metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR)-dependent signaling regulators in CA2 synaptic plasticity. The results showed that mGluR agonist-induced long-term depression (mGluR-LTD) is more pronounced in CA2 compared to CA1, and that this process depends on protein synthesis and the presence of STEP and RGS14 proteins. Additionally, RGS14 was found to play a crucial role in CA2 mGluR-LTD. Furthermore, RGS14 knockout mice showed impaired social recognition memory, suggesting a role for CA2 synaptic plasticity in social cognition.
Pyramidal cells in hippocampal area CA2 have synaptic properties that are distinct from the other CA subregions. Notably, this includes a lack of typical long-term potentiation of stratum radiatum synapses. CA2 neurons express high levels of several known and potential regulators of metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR)-dependent signaling including Striatal-Enriched Tyrosine Phosphatase (STEP) and several Regulator of G-protein Signaling (RGS) proteins, yet the functions of these proteins in regulating mGluR-dependent synaptic plasticity in CA2 are completely unknown. Thus, the aim of this study was to examine mGluR-dependent synaptic depression and to determine whether STEP and the RGS proteins RGS4 and RGS14 are involved. Using whole cell voltage-clamp recordings from mouse pyramidal cells, we found that mGluR agonist-induced long-term depression (mGluR-LTD) is more pronounced in CA2 compared with that observed in CA1. This mGluR-LTD in CA2 was found to be protein synthesis and STEP dependent, suggesting that CA2 mGluR-LTD shares mechanistic processes with those seen in CA1, but in addition, RGS14, but not RGS4, was essential for mGluR-LTD in CA2. In addition, we found that exogenous application of STEP could rescue mGluR-LTD in RGS14 KO slices. Supporting a role for CA2 synaptic plasticity in social cognition, we found that RGS14 KO mice had impaired social recognition memory as assessed in a social discrimination task. These results highlight possible roles for mGluRs, RGS14, and STEP in CA2-dependent behaviors, perhaps by biasing the dominant form of synaptic plasticity away from LTP and toward LTD in CA2.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available