b Long-term memory requires the activity-dependent reorganization of the synaptic proteome to modulate synaptic efficacy and consequently consolidate memory. Activity-regulated RNA translation can change the protein composition at the stimulated synapse. Cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein 3 (CPEB3) is a sequence-specific RNA-binding protein that represses translation of its target mRNAs in neurons, while activation of N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors alleviates this repression. Although recent research has revealed the mechanism of CPEB3-inhibited translation, how NMDA receptor signaling modulates the translational activity of CPEB3 remains unclear. This study shows that the repressor CPEB3 is degraded in NMDA-stimulated neurons and that the degradation of CPEB3 is accompanied by the elevated expression of CPEB3's target, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), mostly at the translational level. Using pharmacological and knockdown approaches, we have identified that calpain 2, activated by the influx of calcium through NMDA receptors, proteolyzes the N-terminal repression motif but not the C-terminal RNA-binding domain of CPEB3. As a result, the calpain 2-cleaved CPEB3 fragment binds to RNA but fails to repress translation. Therefore, the cleavage of CPEB3 by NMDA-activated calpain 2 accounts for the activityrelated translation of CPEB3-targeted RNAs.
Synaptic plasticity, which is the ability of neuronal synapses to undergo morphological and functional changes in response to various stimuli, forms the underlying molecular basis of memory. Activity-induced plasticity-related protein (PRP) synthesis sustains long-lasting synapse changes that are crucial for establishing and consolidating long-term memory. Neurons employ three strategies to increase the synaptic levels of specific PRPs upon activation. PRPs are deposited at the stimulated synapses by capturing the trafficking molecules in the form of proteins or RNAs de novo synthesized from soma (20, 51). The newly delivered PRP RNAs are then translated locally at synapses (51). Alternatively, PRPs are produced through translational activation of preexisting dendritic dormant mRNAs (10,13,45). RNA-binding proteins play essential roles in the modulation of PRP production by regulating dendritic RNA transport, translation, and/or degradation (10,13,22,45). Cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein 3 (CPEB3) is a sequence-specific RNA-binding protein in vertebrates that likely influences PRP synthesis and memory function for the following reasons. First, the Drosophila melanogaster homologue of CPEB3, Orb2, is required for the long-term conditioning of male courtship behavior (32). Clinical research has shown that a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (a T-to-C substitution) in intron 3 of CPEB3 gene affects human episodic memory. Homozygous carriers of the C allele of SNP have poorer performance in the delayed verbal memory recall tests (56). This C allele of SNP located in the CPEB3 ribozyme sequence, exhibits more than 2-fold ...