Mice lacking the gene encoding tissue-type plasminogen activator show a selective interference with late-phase long-term potentiation in both Schaffer collateral and …

YY Huang, ME Bach, HP Lipp, M Zhuo… - Proceedings of the …, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
YY Huang, ME Bach, HP Lipp, M Zhuo, DP Wolfer, RD Hawkins, L Schoonjans, ER Kandel…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996National Acad Sciences
The gene encoding tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is an immediate response
gene, downstream from CREB-1 and other constitutively expressed transcription factors,
which is induced in the hippocampus during the late phase of long-term potentiation (L-
LTP). Mice in which the t-PA gene has been ablated (t-PA-/-) showed no gross anatomical,
electrophysiological, sensory, or motor abnormalities but manifest a selective reduction in L-
LTP in hippocampal slices in both the Schaffer collateral-CA1 and mossy fiber-CA3 …
The gene encoding tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is an immediate response gene, downstream from CREB-1 and other constitutively expressed transcription factors, which is induced in the hippocampus during the late phase of long-term potentiation (L-LTP). Mice in which the t-PA gene has been ablated (t-PA-/-) showed no gross anatomical, electrophysiological, sensory, or motor abnormalities but manifest a selective reduction in L-LTP in hippocampal slices in both the Schaffer collateral-CA1 and mossy fiber-CA3 pathways. t-PA-/- mice also exhibit reduced potentiation by cAMP analogs and D1/D5 agonists. By contrast, hippocampal-dependent learning and memory were not affected in these mice, whereas performance was impaired on two-way active avoidance, a striatum-dependent task. These results provide genetic evidence that t-PA is a downstream effector gene important for L-LTP and show that modest impairment of L-LTP in CA1 and CA3 does not result in hippocampus-dependent behavioral phenotypes.
National Acad Sciences