학술논문

Stimulating β-adrenergic receptors promotes synaptic potentiation by switching CaMKII movement from LTD to LTP mode
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 299(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Mental Health
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Neurological
Long-Term Potentiation
Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2
Receptors
Adrenergic
beta
D-Aspartic Acid
Long-Term Synaptic Depression
Hippocampus
Synapses
Receptors
N-Methyl-D-Aspartate
Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II
L-type Ca(2+)-channels hippocampus
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor
long-term depression
long-term potentiation
synaptic plasticity
β-adrenergic receptors
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Chemical sciences
Language
Abstract
Learning, memory, and cognition are thought to require synaptic plasticity, specifically including hippocampal long-term potentiation and depression (LTP and LTD). LTP versus LTD is induced by high-frequency stimulation versus low-frequency, but stimulating β-adrenergic receptors (βARs) enables LTP induction also by low-frequency stimulation (1 Hz) or theta frequencies (∼5 Hz) that do not cause plasticity by themselves. In contrast to high-frequency stimulation-LTP, such βAR-LTP requires Ca2+-flux through L-type voltage-gated Ca2+-channels, not N-methyl-D-aspartate-type glutamate receptors. Surprisingly, we found that βAR-LTP still required a nonionotropic scaffolding function of the N-methyl-D-aspartate-type glutamate receptor: the stimulus-induced binding of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) to its GluN2B subunit that mediates CaMKII movement to excitatory synapses. In hippocampal neurons, β-adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol (Iso) transformed LTD-type CaMKII movement to LTP-type movement, resulting in CaMKII movement to excitatory instead of inhibitory synapses. Additionally, Iso enabled induction of a major cell-biological feature of LTP in response to LTD stimuli: increased surface expression of GluA1 fused with super-ecliptic pHluorein. Like for βAR-LTP in hippocampal slices, the Iso effects on CaMKII movement and surface expression of GluA1 fused with super-ecliptic pHluorein involved L-type Ca2+-channels and specifically required β2-ARs. Taken together, these results indicate that Iso transforms LTD stimuli to LTP signals by switching CaMKII movement and GluN2B binding to LTP mode.