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Ras acts as a molecular switch between two forms of consolidated memory in Drosophila
Edited by Liqun Luo, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, and approved December 18, 2019 (received for review November 21, 2018)

Significance
The formation of long-lasting memories requires the suppression of factors that negatively regulate long-term memories (LTM). To date, research has largely focused on processes that positively regulate memory acquisition and consolidation. Here, we describe a signaling pathway that acts as a switch between two forms of memory, suppressing one in favor of the other. Inhibition of rho kinase (ROCK) by Ras/Raf activity suppresses anesthesia-resistant memory (ARM) and is required for the formation of protein synthesis-dependent LTM (PSD-LTM). Reduction in Ras/Raf and increased ROCK activity promotes the consolidation of ARM and prevents PSD-LTM. This work 1) defines an LTM suppressor signaling pathway that bidirectionally modulates consolidation and 2) provides a molecular mechanism for a previously observed antagonism between ARM and PSD-LTM.
Abstract
Long-lasting, consolidated memories require not only positive biological processes that facilitate long-term memories (LTM) but also the suppression of inhibitory processes that prevent them. The mushroom body neurons (MBn) in Drosophila melanogaster store protein synthesis-dependent LTM (PSD-LTM) as well as protein synthesis-independent, anesthesia-resistant memory (ARM). The formation of ARM inhibits PSD-LTM but the underlying molecular processes that mediate this interaction remain unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the Ras→Raf→rho kinase (ROCK) pathway in MBn suppresses ARM consolidation, allowing the formation of PSD-LTM. Our initial results revealed that the effects of Ras on memory are due to postacquisition processes. Ras knockdown enhanced memory expression but had no effect on acquisition. Additionally, increasing Ras activity optogenetically after, but not before, acquisition impaired memory performance. The elevated memory produced by Ras knockdown is a result of increased ARM. While Ras knockdown enhanced the consolidation of ARM, it eliminated PSD-LTM. We found that these effects are mediated by the downstream kinase Raf. Similar to Ras, knockdown of Raf enhanced ARM consolidation and impaired PSD-LTM. Surprisingly, knockdown of the canonical downstream extracellular signal-regulated kinase did not reproduce the phenotypes observed with Ras and Raf knockdown. Rather, Ras/Raf inhibition of ROCK was found to be responsible for suppressing ARM. Constitutively active ROCK enhanced ARM and impaired PSD-LTM, while decreasing ROCK activity rescued the enhanced ARM produced by Ras knockdown. We conclude that MBn Ras/Raf inhibition of ROCK suppresses the consolidation of ARM, which permits the formation of PSD-LTM.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: rdavis{at}scripps.edu.
Author contributions: N.C.N. and R.L.D. designed research; N.C.N. and E.W. performed research; N.C.N. and E.W. analyzed data; and N.C.N. and R.L.D. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no competing interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1819925117/-/DCSupplemental.
Published under the PNAS license.
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