|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online November 19, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, v-a (2007)
Copyright © 2007 The Company of Biologists Limited
doi: 10.1242/jeb.001222
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outside JEB |
ERASING MEMORIES
Westfaelische Wilhelms Universitaet Muenster sangha{at}uni-muenster.de
|
It was first thought that when memories are stored, or consolidated into a
long-term stable form, they are resistant to disruption. Much of the focus in
memory research has been on identifying the molecules involved in this storage
process. But, it then became clear that when one of these long-term stable
memories is reactivated, it can return to an unstable state and again be
vulnerable to disruption. A wave of studies then focused on how to
re-stabilize a memory after it had been reactivated. Now, a recent study in
Science by Reut Shema and colleagues from the Weizmann Institute of
Science in Israel has shown that by inhibiting one very specific enzyme,
PKM
, a memory can still be disrupted long after it has been formed, even
when it is not reactivated first. PKM
has been previously implicated in
maintaining memories in the brain area involved in forming memories, the
hippocampus, but its role in the brain area involved in storing memories, the
neocortex, was not known.
The team trained rats to dislike a certain taste by pairing the taste with
a lithium chloride injection, which results in the rats being sick. This
procedure, conditioned taste aversion, is similar to the effect experienced by
those unfortunate individuals who have had food poisoning. The learned
`dislike' is rapidly learned and long remembered. After aversion training, the
authors injected an inhibitor of PKM
, ZIP, into the insular cortex, an
area believed to store taste memories. Rats demonstrated no memory for the
learned dislike 1 week or 1 month later.
Having shown that ZIP inhibits memory directly after learning, the authors wanted to know whether ZIP can disrupt the memory after it has been formed and stored. They repeated the experiment but now injected ZIP 3, 7 or 25 days after aversion training. Regardless of when ZIP was injected, rats again demonstrated no memory for the aversion training. Thus, despite what is traditionally thought in learning theory, there was no closure of the consolidation window, which is the time frame when memories are stored, making them long-term and stable. In addition, the memory did not need to be reactivated first to make it vulnerable. Persistence of memory is thus dependent on the ongoing activity of this enzyme long after the memory is considered to have consolidated into a long-term stable form.
The effects of these experiments seem irreversible suggesting that
PKM
permanently maintains long-term taste memories in the insular
cortex. The role of PKM
in maintaining other types of memories in other
areas of the neocortex remains to be determined. Even though it is difficult
to prove the absence of memory it seems that the authors managed to
permanently erase the memory for the learned dislike. This offers hope for
those who would like unwanted memories erased. But, as an unfortunate sufferer
of food poisoning, I think I would like to keep the memory of that particular
restaurant that ruined my holiday weekend.
References
Shema, R., Sacktor, T. C. and Dudai, Y. (2007).
Rapid erasure of long-term memory associations in the cortex by an inhibitor
of PKM
. Science
317,951
-953.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||