A memory trace in its active state is susceptible to interference by amnesic agents, such as hypothermia and electroconvulsive shock, and by NMDA receptor antagonists, suggesting that a time-dependent consolidation process occurs each time a memory is reactivated. The role of beta noradrenergic receptors in reconsolidation in rats was examined in both a positively reinforced radial maze task and a footshock-reinforced conditioned emotional response task. For the former, rats were trained over several days in a spatial reference memory task and received a single reactivation trial followed by propranolol. A temporally graded impairment was observed when propranolol treatment occurred after the memory reactivation trial. In the emotional task, memory impairing effects of propranolol were greater when the drug was administered after a reactivation trial than when administered immediately after the initial training. These results suggest that reactivation of memory triggers a beta receptor-dependent cascade of intracellular events, recapitulating that which occurs during initial postacquisition consolidation, thus permitting reorganization of the existing memory as a function of new information in the retrieval environment. This remarkable lability of an active memory trace provides a new basis for pharmacotherapeutic intervention in such syndromes as Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. beta adrenoreceptor antagonists may be promising pharmacological agents for attenuating debilitating memories at the time of their controlled reactivation.
The formation of long-term memory requires protein synthesis, particularly during initial memory consolidation. This process also seems to be dependant upon protein degradation, particularly degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. The aim of this study was to investigate the temporal requirement of protein synthesis and degradation during the initial consolidation of allocentric spatial learning. As memory returns to a labile state during reactivation, we also focus on the role of protein synthesis and degradation during memory reconsolidation of this spatial learning. Male CD1 mice were submitted to massed training in the spatial version of the Morris water maze. At various time intervals after initial acquisition or after a reactivation trial taking place 24 h after acquisition, mice received an injection of either the protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin or the protein degradation inhibitor lactacystin. This injection was performed into the hippocampal CA3 region, which is specifically implicated in the processing of spatial information. Results show that, in the CA3 hippocampal region, consolidation of an allocentric spatial learning task requires two waves of protein synthesis taking place immediately and 4 h after acquisition, whereas reconsolidation requires only the first wave. However, for protein degradation, both consolidation and reconsolidation require only one wave, taking place immediately after acquisition or reactivation, respectively. These findings suggest that protein degradation is a key step for memory reconsolidation, as for consolidation. Moreover, as protein synthesis-dependent reconsolidation occurred faster than consolidation, reconsolidation did not consist of a simple repetition of the initial consolidation.
The dentate gyrus (DG), a hippocampal subregion, continuously produces new neurons in the adult mammalian brain that become functionally integrated into existing neural circuits. To what extent this form of plasticity contributes to memory functions remains to be elucidated. Using mapping of activity-dependent gene expression, we visualized in mice injected with the birthdating marker 5-bromo-2 -deoxyuridine the recruitment of new neurons in a set of controlled water maze procedures that engage specific spatial memory processes and require hippocampal-cortical networks. Here, we provide new evidence that adult-generated hippocampal neurons make a specific but differential contribution to the processing of remote spatial memories. First, we show that new neurons in the DG are recruited into neuronal networks that support retrieval of remote spatial memory and that their activation is situation-specific. We further reveal that once selected, new hippocampal neurons are durably incorporated into memory circuits, and also that their recruitment into hippocampal networks contributes predominantly to the updating and strengthening of a previously encoded memory. We find that initial spatial training during a critical period, when new neurons are more receptive to surrounding neuronal activity, favors their subsequent recruitment upon remote memory retrieval. We therefore hypothesize that new neurons activated during this critical period become tagged so that once mature, they are preferentially recruited into hippocampal networks underlying remote spatial memory representation when encountering a similar experience.immediate early gene ͉ learning ͉ memory consolidation ͉ neurogenesis ͉ plasticity N ew neurons are generated throughout adult life in discrete regions of the mammalian brain, including the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus. Some of these newborn neurons become integrated into preexisting hippocampal circuits, raising the possibility that they may thereby contribute to behaviorally relevant neuronal assemblies. Supporting this idea, the increasing number of reports that have used correlative and invasive approaches indicates the existence of a functional link between hippocampal-dependent learning and adult hippocampal neurogenesis (1-5). Recently, it was found that new cells contribute to the functional activity patterns elicited in the hippocampus in response to performing memory tasks that solicit hippocampal networks (4, 6, 7).To date, the nature of the specific contributions of adultgenerated neurons to memory processing remains largely unknown. During the second week after birth, new hippocampal cells enter a period during which they show enhanced synaptic plasticity, their functional maturation occurs, and their ultimate survival is determined (8, 9). At this age, depletion of new neurons leads to memory impairment in several hippocampaldependent tasks (1, 3). Based on these observations, we sought to examine in mice injected with the birthdating marker 5-bromo-2Ј-deoxyuridine (BrdU) the contribu...
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