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Gene targeting: Silva and Giese. Pharmacological approaches to the study of learning and memory: White and Salinas Types of memory • There is general agreement that there are several different types of memory, each of which is predominantly in a different part of the brain. Declarative vs. procedural memory • Declarative memory: facts, dates, events (telephone number, birthdate) – Hippocampus is critical • Procedural memory: how to perform an act (ride a bicycle) – Basal ganglia (dorsal striatum / caudateputamen) is critical • Patients with Alzheimer's disease are unable to learn or remember ordinary facts (declarative memory) but are normal or nearly normal at learning and remembering how to do things (procedural memory). Memory experiment • Alzheimer's patients learned and remembered how to read complex words in a mirror as well as normal control subjects • Were unable to recall the training session or the fact that they had acquired this skill. Classical (Pavlovian) conditioning • Another kind of memory is distinct, both behaviorally and anatomically, from declarative or procedural memory. • Pavlovian conditioning is a form of learning based on the tendency of certain natural events (food presentation) to elicit involuntary responses (salivation) with little or no training. • Initiating event: Unconditioned stimulus (US) • Response pattern: Unconditioned response (UR) • Another "neutral" stimulus (ringing a bell), besides the US, does not usually elicit the UR. • If another "neutral" stimulus (ringing a bell) is presented simultaneously several times with the Unconditioned stimulus (food), the "neutral" will be able to elicit the Unconditioned response (salivation). • The "neutral" stimulus (ringing a bell) is then called the Conditioned stimulus (CS). • The response (salivation) is then called the Conditioned response (CR) • This process of learning an association between a CS and a CR is called Pavlovian or classical conditioning, or sometimes "associative learning". • Pavlovian conditioning occurs automatically, with no control, voluntary participation, or (usually) even awareness on the part of the individual to whom it occurs. • Evidence in animals and humans indicate that the amygdala is critical for classical conditioning. • The studies indicate that the amygdala mediated expression of conditioned rewarding and approach behaviors as well as conditioned aversive and escape responses (e.g., "freezing" in mice). Fear conditioning • A simple form of associative learning (Pavlovian conditioning) • Animals learn to "fear" a previously neutral stimulus (conditioned stimulus, CS), because the US has been presented at the same time as an aversive stimulus (unconditioned stimulus, US) such as a foot shock. • Conditioned animals, when exposed to the CS, tend to refrain from all movement except breathing ("freezing"). • Freezing responses can be triggered with two different types of CS, each working via different parts of the brain: • - In "cued conditioning", the CS is simply a tone (e.g., 85 dB, 2800 Hz), and lesions in the amygdala, but not the hippocampus, appear to disrupt this type of conditioning. • - In "contextual conditioning", rodents become conditioned to the "context" in which they were exposed, such as a particular location. Contextual conditioning is thought to depend on both the amygdala and the hippocampus. Information storage / memory • The most-widely accepted theory of how information is stored in the nervous system is based on a concept first described by D.O. Hebb, now called Hebbian learning. • Start with the idea that each perception evokes a unique set pattern of neural activity. • The set of activated neurons are connected to each other, and reactivate each other for a short period of time. • Hebb suggested that this period of recurrent activation repeatedly activates the synapses connecting the neurons, causing the synapses to undergo permanent changes. These changes facilitate future activation of the synapses. • The pattern of permanently facilitated synapses increases the probability that on future occasions activation of one part of some of the neurons will activate the rest of the neurons, leading to recall of the information it represents. • Changes in synapses resulting from the simultaneous (or near simultaneous) activation of neurons is generally thought to be the basis of all learning, including procedural, declarative, and conditioned learning. • We will see that the central role of synaptic changes in learning and memory provides the bases for the action of neurologic drugs. Memory consolidation • When first acquired, memories are stored in a labile state (represented by Hebb's recurrent activation phase) and are subject to disruption by external events. • With the passage of time their storage may become more permanent (Hebb's synaptic changes) and are less susceptible to disruption. • This process by which memories become permanent is called "consolidation". The interval during which the hypothesized process of synaptic change occurs is called the consolidation period. Gene Targeting: Methods exist to • add, delete, or modify genes in the mouse genome. • restrict expression of mouse genes to specific regions of the brain, • restrict expression to specific experimental conditions: – high/low temperature – presence/absence of antibiotic • These methods can be used to create mouse models of human disease, e.g., Alzheimer' disease. • <Figure 2. Illustration of gene targeting techniques> • The hippocampus has long been known to be involved in memory. • <describe patient> • Genetic work on hippocampal-based learning and memory has focused on long-lasting changes in synaptic efficacy (long-term potentiation and long-term depression) • Concept: memories can be stored in neural circuits by changing the strength of synaptic connections in neurons that are activated simultaneously in a learning event. • Computer simulations have demonstrated that information (memories) can be stored and recalled in a "neural network" in which the weights between "neurons" are altered as a result of learning. • The hippocampus is capable of longlasting changes in synaptic strength. • Drugs that block these synaptic changes also block memory formation. Biochemistry of LTP • Induction of LTP in the CA1 region of the hippocampus involves – NMDA receptor activation – consequent post-synaptic increase in calcium – activation of protein kinases and other enzymes – a partially-characterized sequence of events leading to increased synaptic strength Mutants in genes in this pathway cause changes in learning ability • <Table 1. Gene mutants that impair LTP in hippocampus> • The first gene-targeting study of LTP and learning used mice with a null mutation for the alpha CaMKII gene. • This gene responds to changes in calcium (Ca) ion changes related to memory formation. • Alpha CaMKII mutants showed impaired LTP and LTD in the hippocampus and neocortex. • Although the alpha CaMKII mutant mice were severely impaired in the hippocampal-dependent version of the water maze, they were able to learn the "visible-platform" version of this task, which is known not to depend on hippocampal function. • alpha CaMKII mutants – can learn that the platform is the only escape in the pool – have the motivation to escape the water – have the motor coordination and sensory perception required to efficiently swim to the escape platform, – but they are unable to learn the spatial relationships required to guide them to the hidden platform. • CaMKII appears to be involved in the early stages of memory formation (during initial learning), but not in long-term memory formation. Gene transcription, translation, and memory • DNA is transcribed to produce RNA • RNA is translated to produce protein • DNA -> RNA -> protein • Transcription factors are proteins that regulate what genes are transcribed (expressed). • Transcription factors typically bind near the promoter region of a gene (the on/off switch). • Studies in the 1980's showed using drugs that inhibit protein synthesis also inhibit long-term memory formation. • Several inhibitors of RNA synthesis or protein synthesis block long-term memory, but do not affect short-term memory. • The Aplysia snail: a favorite model organism for memory research • Experiments with Aplysia showed that long term memory required the activation of transcription factors such as CREB (Cyclic AMP Response Element Binding protein). • To trigger transcription, CREB binds to a specific regulatory DNA sequence (TGACGTCA) in the promoter region of certain genes. • This sequence is the Cyclic AMP Response Element (CRE). • When DNA or RNA fragments with the CRE sequence are injected into Aplysia, so that they bind to any available CREB, they block long-term but not short-term memory formation. CREB in long-term memory in Drosophila • Dominant-negative mutation of Drosophila CREB block long term memory, but do not affect other memory stages. • Studies were performed using temperature sensitive CREB mutants, which were only inactivated in high temperature. • Wild type and mutant CREB flies grew up in the permissive (low) temperature, and were then given memory tasks at high temperature. Only flies with the mutant CREB showed long-term memory deficits. • A different CREB mutant expressed CREB at high levels at high temperature (under the control of a heat-shock promoter). • These flies could learn in a single training trial (super memory), where wild type flies required multiple spaced trials. • These results indicate that CREB is required for long-term memory, and is the rate-limiting factor in the nuclear events leading to long-term memory in flies. Problems in gene knockout studies of memory • • • • Compensatory effects of other genes Genetic background effects Developmental effects Impact of unknown physiological or environmental factors Altering memory using drugs • Certain post-training treatments can modulate memory storage in ways the enhance retention. • First observed with stimulant drugs – strychnine (very low doses) – amphetamine – caffeine Example experiment • Rats were put into a cage where they could drink water. • After being put in the cage, the rats heard a series of 10 second tones, each terminated with a brief foot shock. • The shock caused the animals to stop moving (freeze). • After several such tone-shock pairings, the rats acquired a conditioned freezing response, which lasted for several minutes each time the tone was presented. • The next day, the rats were placed in the drinking cage. • Tone came on when they began to drink. • Animals froze • Duration of freezing was used as a measure of the rats' memory for the tone-freezing association. • Rats that experiences more pairings (12) froze significantly longer than rats that had fewer pairings (2). • Some rats got drug injections immediately after their experience of the tone-shock pairings. • Rats that got two pairings followed immediately by a saline injection froze for slightly longer than rats that got two pairings but no injection. • However, rats that got two pairings followed immediately by an amphetamine injection froze for about the same length of time as rats that got 12 pairings (but no drug). • Another group of rats got 2 pairings followed by amphetamine injection 2 hours later. • These rats froze for the same length of time as rates that received saline or no injection, that is, the drug had no effect. • The results indicate that the immediate amphetamine injections improved the rats' memory for the tone-freezing association. • The fact that the delayed drug injection had no effect is consistent with the idea that the memory was susceptible to modulation only during a consolidation period that lasted less than two hours. How might drugs that affect memory work? • Access to the brain from the circulatory system is controlled by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). • This barrier is made up of a layer of cell surrounding the blood vessels that supply the brain. • These cells determine the degree to which substances in the blood can enter the brain. • Fat-soluble substances (e.g., alcohol) cross the BBB more easily than water –soluble substances. • Drugs and hormones with large molecular weights do not easily pass the BBB. • Some substances, including glucose and insulin, are actively transported into the brain. • The degree to which drugs cross the BBB is critical to their effects on memory. How drugs act on synapses • Neurons communicate with each other at synapses using chemical neurotransmitters. • This provides the bases for drugs (and poisons) to affect synaptic transmission. • Drugs with chemical properties similar in some way to those of neurotransmitters can act on synapses to alter behavior and thoughts (psychotropic or psychoactive drugs) • Drugs that increase synaptic transmission are "agonists". • Drugs that block or reduce synaptic transmission are "antagonists". • About 25 neurotransmitters are known in the mammalian brain. • Most psychoactive drugs act on the synapses of a single neurotransmitter. • These synapses often occur in different, functionally unrelated parts of the brain, controlling many different behaviors • The psychological actions of drugs can be quite complex and difficult to predict