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- Ramiro Freudenthal, Arturo Romano, and Aryeh Routtenberg.
- Cresap Neuroscience Laboratory, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA.
- Hippocampus. 2004 Jan 1;14(6):677-83.
AbstractThere is increasing evidence that transcription factors (TFs) play a critical role in maintaining later phases of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). We have been led to study the role in synaptic plasticity of the powerful, yet generally unheralded, NF-kappaB TF because it may serve as both a signaling molecule after its activation at the synapse and then a transcription initiator upon reaching the nucleus. In the present study, we show that LTP activates NF-kappaB in the intact mouse hippocampus. Mice were sacrificed 15 min after one of three treatments: tetanization (high-frequency stimulation [HFS]), low-frequency stimulation (LFS), or no stimulated control animals (CT). In a first study, nuclear NF-kappaB activity from hippocampus was estimated by electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs). A higher level of hippocampal TF binding to the NF-kappaB recognition element was found in the HFS group compared with LFS or CT. In a second study, NF-kappaB activity was evaluated by immunohistochemistry with a specific antibody that recognizes the activated form of NF-kappaB. This antibody binds to the exposed nuclear location sequence on the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB consequent to its dissociation from the inhibitory IkappaB molecule. In the four subfields of hippocampus examined--granule cell layer, hilus of the dentate gyrus, CA3 and CA1 pyramidal fields of the hippocampal gyrus--the highest levels of activated NF-kappaB, statistically significant in all cases were found after HFS. In certain comparisons, LFS animals also showed significant elevation with respect to CT. These results support the role of NF-kappaB as part of the synaptic signaling and transcriptional regulation mechanism required in long-term plasticity, emphasizing the combinatorial nature of TF function.
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