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Title: β3 integrin is dispensable for conditioned fear and hebbian forms of plasticity in the hippocampus. Author: McGeachie AB, Skrzypiec AE, Cingolani LA, Letellier M, Pawlak R, Goda Y. Journal: Eur J Neurosci; 2012 Aug; 36(4):2461-9. PubMed ID: 22748100. Abstract: Integrins play key roles in the developing and mature nervous system, from promoting neuronal process outgrowth to facilitating synaptic plasticity. Recently, in hippocampal pyramidal neurons, β3 integrin (ITGβ3) was shown to stabilise synaptic AMPA receptors (AMPARs) and to be required for homeostatic scaling of AMPARs elicited by chronic activity suppression. To probe the physiological function for ITGβ3-dependent processes in the brain, we examined whether the loss of ITGβ3 affected fear-related behaviours in mice. ITGβ3-knockout (KO) mice showed normal conditioned fear responses that were similar to those of control wild-type mice. However, anxiety-like behaviour appeared substantially compromised and could be reversed to control levels by lentivirus-mediated re-expression of ITGβ3 bilaterally in the ventral hippocampus. In hippocampal slices, the loss of ITGβ3 activity did not compromise hebbian forms of plasticity--neither acute pharmacological disruption of ITGβ3 ligand interactions nor genetic deletion of ITGβ3 altered long-term potentiation (LTP) or long-term depression (LTD). Moreover, we did not detect any changes in short-term synaptic plasticity upon loss of ITGβ3 activity. In contrast, acutely disrupting ITGβ1-ligand interactions or genetic deletion of ITGβ1 selectively interfered with LTP stabilisation whereas LTD remained unaltered. These findings indicate a lack of requirement for ITGβ3 in the two robust forms of hippocampal long-term synaptic plasticity, LTP and LTD, and suggest differential roles for ITGβ1 and ITGβ3 in supporting hippocampal circuit functions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]