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Cerebral Cortex, Vol. 9, No. 3, 249-256, April 1999
© 1999 Oxford University Press

Impaired Experience-dependent Plasticity in Barrel Cortex of Mice Lacking the Alpha and Delta Isoforms of CREB

Stanislaw Glazewski, Alison L. Barth1, Helen Wallace, Mervyn McKenna, Alcino Silva2 and Kevin Fox

Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University and , 2 Departments of Neurobiology, Psychology and Psychiatry, University of California at Los Angeles, CA, USA

The transcription factor cyclic-AMP response element binding protein (CREB) has been implicated in long-term plasticity processes in vertebrate and invertebrate species. In the absence of the alpha/delta CREB isoforms, performance is impaired in long-term memory tasks and the long-term maintenance of long-term potentiation (LTP) is impaired in the hippocampus. However, it is not known whether CREB plays a role in neocortical plasticity. Antibodies to CREB revealed that CREB-immunoreactive nuclei are present in all cortical layers but are more numerous in layers II/III, where they composed at least two-thirds the total population of cells. CREB-immunopositive cells were therefore present and densest in the very cortical layers that exhibit experience-dependent plasticity at this age. In order to assess the role of CREB in neocortical plasticity, we studied the effect of vibrissae deprivation on receptive field plasticity in the barrel cortex of mutant mice lacking the alpha/delta isoforms of CREB. A single vibrissa was spared and the others removed for 18 days. In wild-types this caused potentiation of the spared vibrissa response. However, in adult mutants (>6 months) spared vibrissa responses from homozygotes were potentiated less than in any adolescent animals or in adult wild-type littermates. Surround receptive field responses were abnormally large in homozygotes and failed to increase by the same amount as they did in wild-types. In contrast, the alpha/delta CREB mutation had no discernible effect on plasticity in cortical layers II/III of the younger adolescent age group (1–2 months), suggesting that different plasticity processes may operate at this age. Further tests showed that the beta isoform of CREB was up-regulated in the barrel cortex of the alpha/delta CREB knock-outs, suggesting that this subunit may have compensated partly for the loss of the alpha/ delta isoforms. These studies suggests that CREB plays a role in experience-dependent plasticity in the adult neocortex.

1 Present address: Department of Psychiatry, Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute, UCSF, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA


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