Distinct Proteomic Brain States Underlying Long-Term Memory Formation in Aversive Operant Conditioning

Long-term memory (LTM) formation relies on protein synthesis; however, the full complement of proteins crucial to LTM formation remains unknown in any system. Using an aversive operant conditioning model of aerial respiratory behavior in the pond snail mollusk, ( ), we conducted a transcriptome-guid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of proteome research 2024-12
Hauptverfasser: Bandura, Julia, Chan, Calvin, Sun, Hong-Shuo, Wheeler, Aaron R, Feng, Zhong-Ping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Long-term memory (LTM) formation relies on protein synthesis; however, the full complement of proteins crucial to LTM formation remains unknown in any system. Using an aversive operant conditioning model of aerial respiratory behavior in the pond snail mollusk, ( ), we conducted a transcriptome-guided proteomic analysis on the central nervous system (CNS) of LTM, no LTM, and control animals. We identified 366 differentially expressed proteins linked to LTM formation, with 88 upregulated and 36 downregulated in LTM compared to both no LTM and controls. Functional annotation highlighted the importance of balancing protein synthesis and degradation for LTM, as indicated by the upregulation of proteins involved in proteasome activity and translation initiation, including EIF2D, mRNA levels of which were confirmed to be upregulated by conditioning and implicated nuclear factor Y as a potential regulator of LTM-related transcription in this model. This study represents the first transcriptome-guided proteomic analysis of LTM formation ability in this model and lays the groundwork for discovering orthologous proteins critical to LTM in mammals.
ISSN:1535-3907
1535-3907
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.4c00055