Mapping the spatiotemporal dynamics of de novo protein synthesis during long-term memory formation
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The formation of new associative long-term memory (LTM) following Pavlovian conditioning is dependent upon multiple, temporally distinct windows of mRNA translation. Current methods lack the temporal specificity to robustly characterize the dynamics of protein synthesis throughout the rodent brain following conditioning. Here we resolve these technological limitations and demonstrate that in awake mice, the retro-orbital (RO) injection of azidohomoalanine (AHA) enables the labelling and subsequent visualization of the brain de novo proteome, with labelling periods as short as 30 minutes. Combining this advancement in de novo proteomic labelling with tissue clearing, we identified brain region, cell-type, and neuronal sub-population specific changes in de novo protein synthesis in mice following an auditory threat conditioning paradigm. This approach also allowed us to track the changes in de novo protein synthesis over time, revealing that conditioning-induced changes in mRNA translation exhibit remarkable temporal specificity in brain regions such as the somatosensory cortex. Taken together, our findings highlight how this novel labelling technique can be used to map the highly intricate temporal and spatial dynamics of mRNA translation after behavioral conditioning.