Phosphoproteomic Analysis Reveals a Novel Mechanism of CaMKII alpha Regulation Inversely Induced by Cocaine Memory Extinction versus Reconsolidation

作者:Rich Matthew T; Abbott Thomas B; Chung Lisa; Gulcicek Erol E; Stone Kathryn L; Colangelo Christopher M; Lam TuKiet T; Nairn Angus C; Taylor Jane R; Torregrossa Mary M
来源:Journal of Neuroscience, 2016, 36(29): 7613-7627.
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1108-16.2016

摘要

Successful addiction treatment depends on maintaining long-term abstinence, making relapse prevention an essential therapeutic goal. However, exposure to environmental cues associated with drug use often thwarts abstinence efforts by triggering drug using memories that drive craving and relapse. We sought to develop a dual approach for weakening cocaine memories through phosphoproteomic identification of targets regulated in opposite directions by memory extinction compared with reconsolidation in male Sprague-Dawley rats that had been trained to self-administer cocaine paired with an audiovisual cue. We discovered a novel, inversely regulated, memory-dependent phosphorylation event on calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinase II alpha (CaMKII alpha) at serine (S) 331. Correspondingly, extinction-associated S331 phosphorylation inhibited CaMKII alpha activity. Intra-basolateral amygdala inhibition of CaMKII promoted memory extinction and disrupted reconsolidation, leading to a reduction in subsequent cue-induced reinstatement. CaMKII inhibition had no effect if the memory was neither retrieved nor extinguished. Therefore, inhibition of CaMKII represents a novel mechanism for memory-based addiction treatment that leverages both extinction enhancement and reconsolidation disruption to reduce relapse-like behavior.

  • 出版日期2016-7-20