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- Features of the memory trace (engram), - Memory types, memory systems Richard Semon (1859-1918) and the concept of engram” (engramme, memory trace) 1904 - Die Mneme 1) Engram is a persistent alteration in the brain as a result of a specific event. 2) The content of the engram is linked to the information perceived during encoding and predict what can be recalled later. 3) A major feature of engram is ecphory, the ability to change behavior when reactivated with the appropriate keys. 4) The engram is in a dormant state between encoding and retrieval. “ Engram is the enduring though primarily latent modifications in the irritable substance produced by a stimulus…” “Ecphory awakens the engram out of its latent state into one of manifested activity… “ Synaptic (LTP) (pre-, postsyn. receptors etc) Plasticity and the substrate of engram at different levels of organization Nuclear (CREB,hiszton, c-fos, Arc, synaptic tag) Dendritic spines (size, shape, longevity) Neuronal networks (subnetworks sparse, dense code) Brain regions, memory systems The “life cycle” of the engram Josselyn et al., 2015 NRN The engram in case of fear memory Neuronal representations of engrams Nat Rev Nsci 5:361 Nakazawa, 1) Persistent, linked to a special event 2) Linked to the perceived information 3) Able to change behavior 4) Gets into a dormant state (sleep replay only for 24 hours) Running 5 mp 0 mp During sleep Neuron 36:1183 Lee, Wilson 0 mp 0,15 mp Replay of the engram during sleep and memory consolidation 1. After encoding the engram reactivates spontaneously during sleep 2. The degree of reactivation is correlated with the degree of engram retention (memory) 3. Inhibiting reactivation impairs the memory trace 4. Sensory stimuli present during encoding may recall the engram at a later phase. Specificity of coding and recalling the engram in humans The dormant state of the engram How can we study or demonstrate the existence of the dormant engram? (sleep replay only for 24 hours) Labeling (dormant) engram cells Activity dependent neuronal labeling: immediate early genes – c-fos, Arc, zinc finger 268 linked to markers which are expressed permanently - GFP, LacZ, Channelrhodopsin!!! Halorhodopsin How can we label the specific cell population which participates in coding a given engram? Tet Tag method 1) tetracyclin response element (TRE) – regulates the transcription of an immediate early gene (IEG) 2) tetracyclin transactivator protein (tTA) – binds and activates to TRE 3) !! BUT NOT in the presence of tetrecyclin!! Condition A - tetracyclin provided (in the drinking water) – no IEG transcription Condition B - tetracyclin removed – IEG (and the marker) will be expressed in a GIVEN time window. Subject the animal to a learning situation THE RESULT: SPECIFIC MARKERS ARE EXPRESSED IN THE CELL POPULATION WHICH WAS ACTIVATED DURING THE LEARNING SITUATION Optogenetic activation and inactivation of labeled engram cells Context specific excitation/inhibition of engram cells alters behavior Ecphory (engram criteria 3!) Labeling the dendritic spines!! which are involved in coding an engram Hayashi-Tagaki et al., Nature 2015 Elimination of only those spines which are involved in coding an engram Hayashi-Tagaki et al., Nature 2015 The effect of eliminating the spines involved in the engram in case of motor learning Ctr Venus Venus Venus Allocation – insert given neurons to the engram Basic idea Neurons which are spontaneously more depolarized than the average during the learning situation are more likely to participate in establishing the engram If we are able to slightly depolarize a given cell population we can promote their participation in the engram STEP FUNCION OPSINS AND DREADDs Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs DREADD – and the chemogenetic activation Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs Designer receptor (DR): A G protein coupled receptor which has no ligand in the mammalian nervous system (excitatory/inhibitory, M2/M4) Designer Drug (DD): A drug which can be injected systematically, crosses the bold-brain barrier and acts on DRs at nanomolecular concentration Experiment: 1) Express DR in a well-defined cell population 2) Inject DD 3) Subject the animals to a learning situation Labeled cell will more (or less) likely to participate in the engram The effect of excitation and inhibition of the cells allocated to the engram SUMMARY Studying Semon’s four postulates of engrams in the 21st century 1) Strucutral basis of engram Long term Ca-imaging, electron microscopy 2) Content of the engram recording the activity of neuronal networks, fMRI 3) Ecphory , the effect of engram on behavior Opto- and chemogenetic experiments 4) Sleeping engram Opto- and chemogenetic experiments All memory works according to these principles? How many types of memory we have? Memory impairments of HM bilateral temporal lobectomy (1953) • • • • • New events, autobiographic data New words, new persons Spatial navigation, new places Recognition tests (longer than 5 min) Retrogád amnesia (11 years) ”...forgetting of the events of daily life as quickly as they occur” (Scoville and Millner, 1957) HM - Henry Gustav Molaison MRI of HM The lobectomy involved the majority of hippocampus parts of the amygdala and entorhinal cortex. The selectivity of memory impairments in case of H.M: Impaired: Intact: Memory of events Mirror drawing Intact - Perceptual Priming – Two versions of recalling words After reading 20 words Free recall: What did you read? Complex, contextual learning Hippocamal lesion - Impaired Perceptual priming: What word comes to your mind? Simple association Hippocampal lesion - Intact. Ép marad – Rövid távú memória Different types of memory? Different memory systems? • Motor memory (Procedural, Implicit) • Event memory (Declarative, explicity) Requires training, practice Can be recalled in situation identical to the learning situation (rigid) Can be distructed by learning similar things Can display plasticity in case of brain damage Sport, typing, driving, dancing, priming, operant and classic conditioning Requires a single event Can be recalled in various situations More difficult to distruct No recovery after damage Personal events, persons, data, spatial navigation, words • Fear memory, reward memory In case of significant events single association may be sufficient Can be recalled in situation identical to the learning situation Highly pronounced vegetative responses (heart, breathing, sweat) foot shock, kokain Motor memory circuit Event memory circuit Temporális kéreg Hippokampusz Frontal cortex Thalamus Thalamus Basal ganglia/ Cerebellum Iplastic synapses Mammillary body Fear memory Prefrontal cortex Thalamus Amygdala Autonom centers MEMORY SYSTEMS – 1. Hippokampus Event memory circuit, Papez-circuit Mamillary body Anterior talamus Parahippocampal, perirhinal and posterior cingulate cortices ...and Dracula The effect of anterior thalamic lesion on hippocampus dependent spatial memory task 4 arm maze Fewer arm entry – better performance SHAM - kontroll lesions AM/AV/AD- anterior thalamic nuclei Aggleton et al,. 1996 MEMORY SYSTEMS – 2. Motor memory circuits (Reward memory) MEMORY SYSTEMS – 3. Fear memory midline thalamus medial prefrontal cortex amygdala (lateral, basolateral, central) Synaptic (LTP) (pre-, postsyn. receptors etc) Plasticity and the substrate of engram at different levels of organization Nuclear (CREB,hiszton, c-fos, Arc, synaptic tag) Dendritic spines (size, shape, longevity) Neuronal networks (subnetworks sparse, dense code) Brain regions, memory systems