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Publication : CaMKII activation in the entorhinal cortex disrupts previously encoded spatial memory.

First Author  Yasuda M Year  2006
Journal  Neuron Volume  50
Issue  2 Pages  309-18
PubMed ID  16630840 Mgi Jnum  J:108340
Mgi Id  MGI:3623711 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2006.03.035
Citation  Yasuda M, et al. (2006) CaMKII activation in the entorhinal cortex disrupts previously encoded spatial memory. Neuron 50(2):309-18
abstractText  To investigate the role of the entorhinal cortex in memory at a molecular level, we developed transgenic mice in which transgene expression was inducible and limited to the superficial layers of the medial entorhinal cortex, pre- and parasubiculum. We found that expression of a constitutively active mutant form of CaMKII in these structures disrupted spatial memory formation. Immediate post-training activation of the transgene disrupted previously established memory while transgene activation 3 weeks following the training was ineffective. These results demonstrate that, similar to the hippocampus, the entorhinal cortex plays a time-limited role in spatial memory formation but is not a final cortical repository of long-term memory. Moreover, these results suggest that the indiscriminate activation of CaMKII is able to disrupt preexisting memories, possibly by altering the pattern of synaptic weight changes that are thought to form the basis of the memory trace.
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