Lecture 8 - Molecular mechanisms of Long-term potentiation, Associative plasticity, & Associative memory Flashcards
What is associativity? (Hebb’s postulate)
Any metabolic changes in cell A can affect nearby cell B
- Hebb’s postulate
Associated inputs
How do LTPs form with a weak input (bird) and a strong input (orange) which is further from the cell body?
Associated inputs are stronger due to touch and taste
Orange produced the plasticity proteins because of the strong association
Orange will form late-LTP because of strong input
Bird forms early-LTP which fades after 2-3 hours or a week because no proteins were produced
If bird is associated with orange, proteins produced from orange input are shared with bird to convert short-term memory to long-term memory
Associative memory is time-dependent whether the strong or weak input is first
What are the proteins that promote LTP, associativity and long-term memory?
Protein kinase M zeta (PKMζ) - an LTP specific plasticity protein
Brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) - Critical for cross-capture and LTD tagging
How are CaMK involved in tagging and PRPs (plasticity-related proteins)?
Synaptic stimulation activates CaMKII and CaMKK (which activates CaMKIV)
CaMKIV is involved in transcription of PRPs using CREB
Hypothesis 1 - CaMKII leads to tagging
Hypothesis 2 - CaMKII leads to tagging and transcription of PRPs