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Publication : β-Arrestin-biased signaling mediates memory reconsolidation.

First Author  Liu X Year  2015
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  112
Issue  14 Pages  4483-8
PubMed ID  25831532 Mgi Jnum  J:220814
Mgi Id  MGI:5636522 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1421758112
Citation  Liu X, et al. (2015) beta-Arrestin-biased signaling mediates memory reconsolidation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 112(14):4483-8
abstractText  A long-standing hypothesis posits that a G protein-coupled signaling pathway mediates beta-adrenergic nervous system functions, including learning and memory. Here we report that memory retrieval (reactivation) induces the activation of beta1-adrenergic beta-arrestin signaling in the brain, which stimulates ERK signaling and protein synthesis, leading to postreactivation memory restabilization. beta-Arrestin2-deficient mice exhibit impaired memory reconsolidation in object recognition, Morris water maze, and cocaine-conditioned place preference paradigms. Postreactivation blockade of both brain beta-adrenergic Gs protein- and beta-arrestin-dependent pathways disrupts memory reconsolidation. Unexpectedly, selective blockade of the Gs/cAMP/PKA signaling but not the beta-arrestin/ERK signaling by the biased beta-adrenergic ligands does not inhibit reconsolidation. Moreover, the expression of beta-arrestin2 in the entorhinal cortex of beta-arrestin 2-deficient mice rescues beta1-adrenergic ERK signaling and reconsolidation in a G protein pathway-independent manner. We demonstrate that beta-arrestin-biased signaling regulates memory reconsolidation and reveal the potential for beta-arrestin-biased ligands in the treatment of memory-related disorders.
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