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Publication : Impaired memory retention and decreased long-term potentiation in integrin-associated protein-deficient mice.

First Author  Chang HP Year  1999
Journal  Learn Mem Volume  6
Issue  5 Pages  448-57
PubMed ID  10541465 Mgi Jnum  J:59818
Mgi Id  MGI:1352188 Doi  10.1101/lm.6.5.448
Citation  Chang HP, et al. (1999) Impaired memory retention and decreased long-term potentiation in integrin-associated protein-deficient mice. Learn Mem 6(5):448-57
abstractText  Previously, we have demonstrated that integrin-associated protein (IAP) mRNA level is approximately fourfold higher in rats showing good retention performance (600 sec) than rats showing poor retention performance (< 80 sec) in an inhibitory avoidance learning paradigm. In the present study, we have used the gene-targeted IAP-deficient mice to further investigate the role of IAP involved in memory formation and hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) in vivo. Results revealed that there was a significant impairment in memory retention and a significant reduction in the magnitude of LTP in IAP-deficient mice when compared with the wild-type and heterozygote mice, whereas the wild-type and heterozygote animals did not show marked differences on these measures. Furthermore, the impairment in retention performance of IAP-deficient mice was not due to different sensitivities of these animals to the electric shock. When we examined locomotor activity and rotarod treadmill performance, no differences were observed among these three groups of animals either. Western blot analysis confirmed the lack of IAP protein in IAP-deficient mice, whereas IAP expression was similar in both the wild-type and heterozygote controls. These results together demonstrate that IAP plays an important role in the process of memory formation and synaptic plasticity in mice.
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