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Endogenous opioid peptides contribute to associative LTP in the hippocampal CA3 region
Authors:Martinez Carlo O  Do Viet H  Derrick Brian E
Institution:aDepartment of Surgery, University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Dr. Mail Code 7737, San Antonio, TX 78229-3900, United States;bGrand Rapids Medical Education Partners, Michigan State University Plastic Surgery, 1000 Monroe NW, Grand Rapids, MI 49503, United States;cThe Neurosciences Institute, The Department of Biology, The University of Texas at San Antonio, 1 UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249-0662, United States
Abstract:The medial and lateral perforant path projections to the hippocampal CA3 region display distinct mechanisms of long-term potentiation (LTP) induction, N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) and opioid receptor dependent, respectively. However, medial and lateral perforant path projections to the CA3 region display associative LTP with coactivation, suggesting that while they differ in receptors involved in LTP induction they may share common downstream mechanisms of LTP induction. Here we address this interaction of LTP induction mechanisms by evaluating the contribution of opioid receptors to the induction of associative LTP among the medial and lateral perforant path projections to the CA3 region in vivo. Local application of the opioid receptor antagonists naloxone or Cys2-Tyr3-Orn5-Pen7-amide (CTOP) normally block induction of lateral perforant path-CA3 LTP. However, these opioid receptor antagonists failed to block associative LTP in lateral perforant path-CA3 synapses when it was induced by strong coactivation of the medial perforant pathway which displays NMDAR-dependent LTP. Thus strong activation of non-opioidergic afferents can substitute for the opioid receptor activation required for lateral perforant path LTP induction. Conversely, medial perforant path-CA3 associative LTP was blocked by opioid receptor antagonists when induced by strong coactivation of the opioidergic lateral perforant path. These data indicate endogenous opioid peptides contribute to associative LTP at coactive synapses when induced by strong coactivation of an opioidergic afferent system. These data further suggest that associative LTP induction is regulated by the receptor mechanisms of the strongly stimulated pathway. Thus, while medial and lateral perforant path synapses differ in their mechanisms of LTP induction, associative LTP at these synapses share common downstream mechanisms of induction.
Keywords:Long-term potentiation (LTP)  CA3  Perforant path  NMDA receptor  Mu opioid receptor  Associative LTP
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