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Experience‐dependent expression of NPAS4 regulates plasticity in adult visual cortex
Author(s) -
MayaVetencourt José Fernando,
Tiraboschi Ettore,
Greco Dario,
Restani Laura,
Cerri Chiara,
Auvinen Petri,
Maffei Lamberto,
Castrén Eero
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.2012.234237
Subject(s) - neuroplasticity , monocular deprivation , neuroscience , developmental plasticity , biology , plasticity , transcription factor , visual cortex , ocular dominance , gene , genetics , physics , thermodynamics
Key points• Transcription factors at the basis of plasticity in the adult visual system are unknown. • Enhanced levels of NPAS4 transcription factor parallel visual cortical plasticity in adult life. • Overexpression of NPAS4 restores plasticity in the adult visual cortex. • NPAS4 down‐regulation prevents the plastic outcome caused by fluoxetine (FLX) in adulthood. • NPAS4 regulates the expression of plasticity genes in the adult visual cortex.Abstract There is evidence that developmental‐like plasticity can be reactivated in the adult visual cortex. Although activity‐dependent transcription factors underlying the process of plasticity reactivation are currently unknown, recent studies point towards NPAS4 as a candidate gene for the occurrence of plasticity in the adult visual system. Here, we addressed whether NPAS4 is involved in the reinstatement of plasticity by using the monocular deprivation protocol and long‐term fluoxetine treatment as a pharmacological strategy that restores plasticity in adulthood. A combination of molecular assays for gene expression and epigenetic analysis, gene delivery by lentiviral infection, shRNA interference and electrophysiology as a functional read‐out, revealed a previously unknown role for the transcription factor NPAS4 in the regulation of adult visual cortical plasticity. We found that NPAS4 overexpression restores ocular dominance plasticity in adult naïve animals whereas NPAS4 down‐regulation prevents the plastic outcome caused by fluoxetine in adulthood. Our findings lead the way to the identification of novel therapeutic targets for pathological conditions where reorganization of neuronal networks would be beneficial in adult life.