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Cellular site and molecular mode of synapsin action in associative learning
Author(s) -
Birgit Michels,
YiChung Chen,
Timo Saumweber,
Dushyant Mishra,
Hiromu Tanimoto,
Benjamin Schmid,
Olivia Engmann,
Bertram Gerber
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
learning and memory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.228
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1549-5485
pISSN - 1072-0502
DOI - 10.1101/lm.2101411
Subject(s) - mushroom bodies , synapsin , associative learning , synapsin i , neuroscience , biology , synaptic plasticity , genetics , gene , synaptic vesicle , drosophila melanogaster , vesicle , receptor , membrane
Synapsin is an evolutionarily conserved, presynaptic vesicular phosphoprotein. Here, we ask where and how synapsin functions in associative behavioral plasticity. Upon loss or reduction of synapsin in a deletion mutant or via RNAi, respectively, Drosophila larvae are impaired in odor-sugar associative learning. Acute global expression of synapsin and local expression in only the mushroom body, a third-order “cortical” brain region, fully restores associative ability in the mutant. No rescue is found by synapsin expression in mushroom body input neurons or by expression excluding the mushroom bodies. On the molecular level, we find that a transgenically expressed synapsin with dysfunctional PKA-consensus sites cannot rescue the defect of the mutant in associative function, thus assigning synapsin as a behaviorally relevant effector of the AC-cAMP-PKA cascade. We therefore suggest that synapsin acts in associative memory trace formation in the mushroom bodies, as a downstream element of AC-cAMP-PKA signaling. These analyses provide a comprehensive chain of explanation from the molecular level to an associative behavioral change.

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