328 research outputs found
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Novel Small-RNA Mediated Gene Regulatory Mechanisms for Long-Term Memory
Memory storage and memory-related synaptic plasticity rely on precise spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression. To explore the role of small RNAs in memory-related synaptic plasticity we carried out massive parallel sequencing to profile the small RNAs of Aplysia. We identified 170 distinct 21-23 nt sized miRNAs, 13 of which were novel and specific to Aplysia. Nine miRNAs were brain-enriched, and several of these were rapidly down-regulated by transient exposure to serotonin, a modulatory neurotransmitter released during learning. Two abundant, and conserved brain-specific miRNAs, miR-124 and miR-22 were exclusively present pre-synaptically in a sensory-motor synapse where they constrain synaptic facilitation through regulation of the transcriptional factor CREB1 and translation factor CPEB respectively. We therefore provide the first evidence that a modulatory neurotransmitter important for learning can regulate the levels of small RNAs and present a novel role for miR-124 and miR-22 in long-term plasticity of synapses in the mature nervous system. While mining the small RNA libraries for miRNAs, we discovered an unexpected and abundant expression in brain of a 28-nt sized class of piRNAs, which had been thought to be germ-line specific. These piRNAs have unique biogenesis patterns and predominant nuclear localization. Moreover, we find that whereas miRNAs are down-regulated by exposure to serotonin, piRNAs are up-regulated. Importantly, we find that the piwi/piRNA complex facilitates serotonin-dependent methylation of a conserved CpG island in the promoter of CREB2, the major inhibitory constraint of memory in Aplysia, leading to the persistence of long-term synaptic facilitation. Taken together, these findings provide a new serotonin-dependent, bidirectional, small-RNA mediated gene regulatory mechanism during plasticity where miRNAs provide translational control and piRNAs provide long-lasting transcriptional control for the persistence of memory
Rabies screen reveals GPe control of cocaine-triggered plasticity.
Identification of neural circuit changes that contribute to behavioural plasticity has routinely been conducted on candidate circuits that were preselected on the basis of previous results. Here we present an unbiased method for identifying experience-triggered circuit-level changes in neuronal ensembles in mice. Using rabies virus monosynaptic tracing, we mapped cocaine-induced global changes in inputs onto neurons in the ventral tegmental area. Cocaine increased rabies-labelled inputs from the globus pallidus externus (GPe), a basal ganglia nucleus not previously known to participate in behavioural plasticity triggered by drugs of abuse. We demonstrated that cocaine increased GPe neuron activity, which accounted for the increase in GPe labelling. Inhibition of GPe activity revealed that it contributes to two forms of cocaine-triggered behavioural plasticity, at least in part by disinhibiting dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area. These results suggest that rabies-based unbiased screening of changes in input populations can identify previously unappreciated circuit elements that critically support behavioural adaptations
Uracils at nucleotide position 9–11 are required for the rapid turnover of miR-29 family
MicroRNAs are endogenous small RNA molecules that regulate gene expression. Although the biogenesis of microRNAs and their regulation have been thoroughly elucidated, the degradation of microRNAs has not been fully understood. Here by using the pulse–chase approach, we performed the direct measurement of microRNA lifespan. Five representative microRNAs demonstrated a general feature of relatively long lifespan. However, the decay dynamic varies considerably between these individual microRNAs. Mutation analysis of miR-29b sequence revealed that uracils at nucleotide position 9–11 are required for its rapid decay, in that both specific nucleotides and their position are critical. The effect of uracil-rich element on miR-29b decay dynamic occurs in duplex but not in single strand RNA. Moreover, analysis of published data on microRNA expression profile during development reveals that a substantial subset of microRNAs with the uracil-rich sequence tends to be down-regulated compared to those without the sequence. Among them, Northern blotting shows that miR-29c and fruit fly bantam possess a relatively rapid turnover rate. The effect of uracil-rich sequence on microRNA turnover depends on the sequence context. The present work indicates that microRNAs contain sequence information in the middle region besides the sequence element at both ends
MicroRNA132 Modulates Short-Term Synaptic Plasticity but Not Basal Release Probability in Hippocampal Neurons
MicroRNAs play important regulatory roles in a broad range of cellular processes including neuronal morphology and long-term synaptic plasticity. MicroRNA-132 (miR132) is a CREB-regulated miRNA that is induced by neuronal activity and neurotrophins, and plays a role in regulating neuronal morphology and cellular excitability. Little is known about the effects of miR132 expression on synaptic function. Here we show that overexpression of miR132 increases the paired-pulse ratio and decreases synaptic depression in cultured mouse hippocampal neurons without affecting the initial probability of neurotransmitter release, the calcium sensitivity of release, the amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents or the size of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles. These findings are the first to demonstrate that microRNAs can regulate short-term plasticity in neurons
FindSim: a Framework for Integrating Neuronal Data and Signaling Models
Current experiments touch only small but overlapping parts of very complex subcellular signaling networks in neurons. Even with modern optical reporters and pharmacological manipulations, a given experiment can only monitor and control a very small subset of the diverse, multiscale processes of neuronal signaling. We have developed FindSim (Framework for Integrating Neuronal Data and SIgnaling Models) to anchor models to structured experimental datasets. FindSim is a framework for integrating many individual electrophysiological and biochemical experiments with large, multiscale models so as to systematically refine and validate the model. We use a structured format for encoding the conditions of many standard physiological and pharmacological experiments, specifying which parts of the model are involved, and comparing experiment outcomes with model output. A database of such experiments is run against successive generations of composite cellular models to iteratively improve the model against each experiment, while retaining global model validity. We suggest that this toolchain provides a principled and scalable way to tackle model complexity and diversity of data sources
Neuronal Activity Regulates Hippocampal miRNA Expression
Neuronal activity regulates a broad range of processes in the hippocampus, including the precise regulation of translation. Disruptions in proper translational control in the nervous system are associated with a variety of disorders that fall in the autistic spectrum. MicroRNA (miRNA) represent a relatively recently discovered player in the regulation of translation in the nervous system. We have conducted an in depth analysis of how neuronal activity regulates miRNA expression in the hippocampus. Using deep sequencing we exhaustively identify all miRNAs, including 15 novel miRNAs, expressed in hippocampus of the adult mouse. We identified 119 miRNAs documented in miRBase but less than half of these miRNA were expressed at a level greater than 0.1% of total miRNA. Expression profiling following induction of neuronal activity by electroconvulsive shock demonstrates that most miRNA show a biphasic pattern of expression: rapid induction of specific mature miRNA expression followed by a decline in expression. These results have important implications into how miRNAs influence activity-dependent translational control
Targeting of the Arpc3 actin nucleation factor by miR-29a/b regulates dendritic spine morphology
Regulation of Arpc3 by miRNA alters dendritic spine morphology
The wisdom of networks: A general adaptation and learning mechanism of complex systems: The network core triggers fast responses to known stimuli; innovations require the slow network periphery and are encoded by core-remodeling
I hypothesize that re-occurring prior experience of complex systems mobilizes
a fast response, whose attractor is encoded by their strongly connected network
core. In contrast, responses to novel stimuli are often slow and require the
weakly connected network periphery. Upon repeated stimulus, peripheral network
nodes remodel the network core that encodes the attractor of the new response.
This "core-periphery learning" theory reviews and generalizes the heretofore
fragmented knowledge on attractor formation by neural networks,
periphery-driven innovation and a number of recent reports on the adaptation of
protein, neuronal and social networks. The coreperiphery learning theory may
increase our understanding of signaling, memory formation, information encoding
and decision-making processes. Moreover, the power of network periphery-related
'wisdom of crowds' inventing creative, novel responses indicates that
deliberative democracy is a slow yet efficient learning strategy developed as
the success of a billion-year evolution.Comment: The 2015 preliminary version can be downloaded as an earlier version
of the final paper here. Please find illustrative videos here:
http://networkdecisions.linkgroup.hu and a video abstract here:
https://youtu.be/IIjP7zWGjV
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