Additionally, the researchers have found out how these associative memory neurons are controlled.
Has the scent of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies ever taken you back to afternoons at your parents’ house? Has an old song ever brought back memories of a first date? The ability to remember relationships between unrelated items (an odor and a location, a song, and an event) is known as associative memory.
We rely on associative memories in our everyday lives and the new research is an important step in understanding the detailed mechanism of how these types of memories are formed in the brain.
Psychologists began studying associative memory in the 1800s, with William James describing the phenomenon in his 1890 classic The Principles of Psychology. Scientists today agree that the structures responsible for the formation of associative memory are found in the medial temporal lobe, or the famous “memory center” of the brain, but the particular cells involved, and how those cells are controlled, have remained a mystery until now.
“Although associative memory is one of the most basic forms of memory in our everyday life, mechanisms underlying associative memory remain unclear” says lead researcher Kei Igarashi, faculty fellow of the Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory and assistant professor of anatomy and neurobiology at the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine.
The new study reports for the first time that specific cells in the lateral entorhinal cortex of the medial temporal lobe, called fan cells, are required for the acquisition of new associative memories and that these cells are controlled by dopamine, a brain chemical known to be involved in our experience of pleasure or reward.
In the study, researchers used electrophysiological recordings and optogenetics to record and control activity from fan cells in mice as they learn to associate specific odors with rewards. This approach led researchers to discover that fan cells compute and represent the association of the two new unrelated items (odor and reward). These fan cells are required for successful acquisition of new associative memories. Without these cells, pre-learned associations can be retrieved, but the new associations cannot be acquired. Additionally acquiring new associations also requires dopamine.
“We never expected that dopamine is involved in the memory circuit. However, when the evidence accumulated, it gradually became clear that dopamine is involved,” says Igarashi. “These experiments were like a detective story for us, and we are excited about the results.”
This discovery is an important piece in the puzzle of understanding how memories are formed in the brain and lays a foundation on which other researchers can continue to build. Associative memory abilities are known to decline in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s disease. Understanding the neurobiological mechanism of how these memories are formed is the first step to developing therapeutics to slow the loss of associative memory abilities in Alzheimer’s Disease.
The research appears in Nature. Additional researchers from the University of California, Irvine, and the University of Fukui, Japan contributed to the work.
Support for the research came from the National Institute of Health, a PRESTO grant from Japan Science and Technology Agency, a Brain Research Foundation Fay-Frank Seed Grant, a Whitehall Foundation Research Grant, a BrightFocus Foundation Research grant, an Alzheimer’s Association Research Grant, and a New Vision Research Investigator Award to Kei Igarashi. The University of California, Irvine Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP) and an NIH F31 grant supported coauthor Heechul Jun.
Source: UC Irvine
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