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Protein Believed to Control Formation of Memory Identified by Scripps Research
Institute & UCSD Scientists
La Jolla, CA, June 23, 2004 - Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
and the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine have demonstrated
that the action of a protein called CBP is essential for the stabilization of
long-term memory, a discovery that may help children with a rare but debilitating
developmental disorder.
They found that when the functions of normal CBP is suppressed in adult rodents,
the animals had trouble forming long-term memories, suggesting that CBP is required
for the formation of long-term memory and that defects in CBP are involved in
cognitive dysfunction.
Furthermore, the scientists found that they were able to correct
this defect by administering a drug that restored CBP's function.
"This is significant," says Mark Mayford, Ph.D., an associate
professor of cell biology and a member of the Institute for Childhood and Neglected
Diseases at Scripps Research. Before moving to Scripps Research four years ago,
Mayford was a faculty member at UCSD, where together with another UCSD scientist
Edward Korzus, Ph.D., they initiated the research.
"There is a link between this molecule and very severe problems
in humans," Mayford added, noting that the findings may be significant for children
with the rare but severe developmental disorder known as Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome,
which causes growth and mental retardation and several anatomical abnormalities.
These children have mutations in their CBP genes.
Protein Memories
Scientists have long known that when laboratory animals are treated with
a class of drugs known as protein synthesis inhibitors, which stops the production
of proteins in the animals' brains, these animals lose their long-term memory.
This observation has led scientists to predict that the formation of long-term
memory requires new protein synthesis.
This prediction has since been borne out in experiments repeated
in many different species - from mice to fruit flies.
After this fact was established, a number of scientists around
the country began looking for the specific genes and proteins that could stabilize
long-term memory.
One such signal had already been discovered by other scientists
when they began their work - the protein CREB. CREB is what is known as a
transcription factor, a protein that interacts with the DNA of a gene and controls
the early steps in "turning on" the expression of a new protein. Mutations in
CREB prevent the activation of certain genes, and animals with defective forms
of CREB have problems forming long-term memories.
But, scientists asked, was CREB the only protein that controls
memory formation?
A few years ago, Korzus and Mayford were working at the UCSD
School of Medicine, where in a collaboration with Michael G. Rosenfeld, M.D.,
who is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and Professor of Medicine
at UCSD, they began looking for other signals in neurons that affected the formation
of long-term memory. Korzus and Mayford continued their work at Scripps Research,
focusing on a mutation in rodents that affected a protein associated with CREB
called CREB binding protein (CBP). CBP is what is known as a coactivator of transcription - it
works with CREB to control the expression of genes.
CBP is sort of like a molecular haberdasher. It grooms proteins
involved in gene expression by fitting them with chemicals that turn them on
or off. Specifically, CBP attaches acetyl groups to other proteins, and these
acetyl accoutrements modulate their behavior in the cell.
One of the proteins in neurons that CBP acetylates are histones.
Histones are short cylindrical proteins that associate with DNA in the nuclei
of cells.
Histones are the fashion mavens of the molecular world. They
must be wearing something! Normally, they have an affinity for wrapping themselves
with DNA, and so DNA wraps around them in the cell, forming a compact bundle
of DNA and protein called chromatin. This allows the DNA in a cell to maintain
a compact form. Seen under a microscope, the DNA and histones appear as distinct
bundles known as chromosomes.
But when a gene is going to be expressed, such as during the
formation of long-term memory, the chromatin must be opened up and the DNA unwound
from the histones. CBP plays a critical role in this process because it acetylates
amino acids known as lysine on the histones, and this makes the histones lose
their affinity for the DNA and facilitates the expression of genes on that DNA.
Losing and Regaining Memory Ability
Korzus and Mayford performed an experiment in which they could turn on a
defective form of CBP in adult rodents. They found that the defective CBP cannot
acetylate the histones, and this prevents the DNA wound around the histones from
releasing. This, in turn, prevents protein synthesis, and that prevents the formation
of long-term memory.
Significantly, Korzus and Mayford were able to correct the
long-term memory defect in the animals by administering a leukemia drug called
histone deacetylase inhibitor Trichostatin A, which put the acetyl group back
on the histones.
Their results suggest that remodeling of chromatin is important
in learning and memory. It also provides a new mechanism for influencing cognitive
function. And it suggests a possible treatment for the mental retardation associated
with Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome.
The article, "CBP histone acetyltransferase activity is critical
component of memory consolidation" by Edward Korzus, Michael G. Rosenfeld, and
Mark Mayford appears in the June 24, 2004 issue of the journal Neuron.
See http://www.neuron.org.
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health,
the National Institute of Mental Health, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
and the Institute for Childhood and Neglected Diseases at Scripps Research.
About The Scripps Research Institute
The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, is one of the world's
largest, private, non-profit biomedical research organizations. It stands at
the forefront of basic biomedical science that seeks to comprehend the most fundamental
processes of life. Scripps Research is internationally recognized for its research
into immunology, molecular and cellular biology, chemistry, neurosciences, autoimmune
diseases, cardiovascular diseases and synthetic vaccine development.
For more information contact:
Jason Bardi
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.9254
Fax: 858.784.8118
jasonb@scripps.edu
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