Content area

Abstract

Epigenetic mechanisms regulate the formation, consolidation and reconsolidation of memories. However, the signaling path from neuronal activation to epigenetic modifications within the memory-related brain circuit remains unknown. We report that learning induces long-lasting histone modifications in hippocampal memory-activated neurons to regulate memory stability. Neuronal activity triggers a late-onset shift in Nrxn1 splice isoform choice at splicing site 4 by accumulating a repressive histone marker, H3K9me3, to modulate the splicing process. Activity-dependent phosphorylation of p66α via AMP-activated protein kinase recruits HDAC2 and Suv39h1 to establish repressive histone markers and changes the connectivity of the activated neurons. Removal of Suv39h1 abolished the activity-dependent shift in Nrxn1 splice isoform choice and reduced the stability of established memories. We uncover a cell-autonomous process for memory preservation in which memory-related neurons initiate a late-onset reduction of their rewiring capacities through activity-induced histone modifications.

Details

Title
Activity-induced histone modifications govern Neurexin-1 mRNA splicing and memory preservation
Author
Ding, Xinlu; Liu, Sanxiong; Tian, Miaomiao; Zhang, Wenhao; Zhu, Tao; Li, Dongdong; Wu, Jiawei; Deng, Haiteng; Jia, Yichang; Xie, Wei; Xie, Hong; Guan, Ji-song
Pages
690-699
Publication year
2017
Publication date
May 2017
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10976256
e-ISSN
15461726
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1892271076
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group May 2017