Inducible and cell-type restricted manipulation in the entorhinal cortex
- PMID: 16630829
- DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2006.04.007
Inducible and cell-type restricted manipulation in the entorhinal cortex
Abstract
The entorhinal cortex functions as the gateway to the hippocampal formation. However, its role in formation and consolidation of hippocampus-dependent memory remains relatively unexplored. In this issue of Neuron, Yasuda and Mayford report an elegant cell-type restricted inducible transgenic mouse overexpressing a mutant form of CaM kinase II selectively in superficial layers of medial entorhinal cortex and its upstream regions. These animals display a selective spatial memory deficit during the immediate posttraining period as well as during acquisition in the Morris water maze. Similar to the hippocampus, this time-limited involvement of entorhinal cortex in spatial memory processing suggests a crucial role for hippocampal-entorhinal circuitry in spatial memory formation.
Comment on
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CaMKII activation in the entorhinal cortex disrupts previously encoded spatial memory.Neuron. 2006 Apr 20;50(2):309-18. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2006.03.035. Neuron. 2006. PMID: 16630840
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