Synapse Innervation and Associative Memory Cell Are Recruited for Integrative Storage of Whisker and Odor Signals in the Barrel Cortex through miRNA-Mediated Processes

Lei, Zhuofan and Wang, Dangui and Chen, Na and Ma, Ke and Lu, Wei and Song, Zhenhua and Cui, Shan and Wang, Jin-Hui (2017) Synapse Innervation and Associative Memory Cell Are Recruited for Integrative Storage of Whisker and Odor Signals in the Barrel Cortex through miRNA-Mediated Processes. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 11. ISSN 1662-5102

[thumbnail of pubmed-zip/versions/2/package-entries/fncel-11-00316-r1/fncel-11-00316.pdf] Text
pubmed-zip/versions/2/package-entries/fncel-11-00316-r1/fncel-11-00316.pdf - Published Version

Download (2MB)

Abstract

Associative learning is a common way for information acquisition, and the integrative storage of multiple associated signals is essential for associative thinking and logical reasoning. In terms of the cellular mechanism for associative memory, our studies by behavioral task and cellular imaging demonstrate that paired whisker and odor stimulations lead to odorant-induced whisker motion and associative memory cell recruitment in the barrel cortex (BC), which is driven presumably by synapse innervation from co-activated sensory cortices. To confirm these associative memory cells and synapse innervations essential for associative memory and to examine their potential mechanisms, we studied a causal relationship between epigenetic process and memory cell/synapse recruitment by manipulating miRNAs and observing the changes from the recruitments of associative memory cells and synapse innervations to associative memory. Anti-miRNA-324 and anti-miRNA-133a in the BC significantly downregulate new synapse innervation, associative memory cell recruitment and odorant-induced whisker motion, where Tau-tubulin kinase-1 expression is increased. Therefore, the upregulated miRNA-324 in associative learning knocks down Ttbk1-mediated Tau phosphorylation and microtubule depolymerization, which drives the balance between polymerization and depolymerization toward the axon prolongation and spine stabilization to initiate new synapse innervations and to recruit associative memory cells.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Afro Asian Library > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@afroasianlibrary.com
Date Deposited: 05 Jun 2023 05:39
Last Modified: 18 Jun 2024 07:34
URI: http://classical.academiceprints.com/id/eprint/1004

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item