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Gravin Orchestrates Protein Kinase A and β2-Adrenergic Receptor Signaling Critical for Synaptic Plasticity and Memory

Cited 49 time in Web of Science Cited 56 time in Scopus
Authors

Havekes, Robbert; Canton, David A.; Park, Alan J.; Huang, Ted; Nie, Ting; Day, Jonathan P.; Guercio, Leonardo A.; Grimes, Quinn; Luczak, Vincent; Gelman, Irwin H.; Baillie, George S.; Scott, John D.; Abel, Ted

Issue Date
2012-12
Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
Citation
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Vol.32 No.50, pp.18137-18149
Abstract
A kinase-anchoring proteins (AKAPs) organize compartmentalized pools of protein kinase A (PKA) to enable localized signaling events within neurons. However, it is unclear which of the many expressed AKAPs in neurons target PKA to signaling complexes important for long-lasting forms of synaptic plasticity and memory storage. In the forebrain, the anchoring protein gravin recruits a signaling complex containing PKA, PKC, calmodulin, and PDE4D (phosphodiesterase 4D) to the beta 2-adrenergic receptor. Here, we show that mice lacking the alpha-isoform of gravin have deficits in PKA-dependent long-lasting forms of hippocampal synaptic plasticity including beta 2-adrenergic receptor-mediated plasticity, and selective impairments of long-term memory storage. Furthermore, both hippocampal beta 2-adrenergic receptor phosphorylation by PKA, and learning-induced activation of ERK in the CA1 region of the hippocampus are attenuated in mice lacking gravin-alpha. We conclude that gravin compartmentalizes a significant pool of PKA that regulates learning-induced beta 2-adrenergic receptor signaling and ERK activation in the hippocampus in vivo, thereby organizing molecular interactions between glutamatergic and noradrenergic signaling pathways for long-lasting synaptic plasticity, and memory storage.
ISSN
0270-6474
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/203413
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3612-12.2012
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Research Area Computational decoding, Electrophysiology, Neuroscience

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