» Articles » PMID: 20962282

Relevance of Synaptic Tagging and Capture to the Persistence of Long-term Potentiation and Everyday Spatial Memory

Overview
Specialty Science
Date 2010 Oct 22
PMID 20962282
Citations 111
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Memory for inconsequential events fades, unless these happen before or after other novel or surprising events. However, our understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms of novelty-enhanced memory persistence is mainly restricted to aversive or fear-associated memories. We now outline an "everyday appetitive" behavioral model to examine whether and how unrelated novelty facilitates the persistence of spatial memory coupled to parallel electrophysiological studies of the persistence of long-term potentiation (LTP). Across successive days, rats were given one trial per day to find food in different places and later had to recall that day's location. This task is both hippocampus and NMDA receptor dependent. First, encoding with low reward induced place memory that decayed over 24 h; in parallel, weak tetanization of CA1 synapses in brain slices induced early-LTP fading to baseline. Second, novelty exploration scheduled 30 min after this weak encoding resulted in persistent place memory; similarly, strong tetanization--analogous to novelty--both induced late-LTP and rescued early- into late-LTP on an independent but convergent pathway. Third, hippocampal dopamine D1/D5 receptor blockade or protein synthesis inhibition within 15 min of exploration prevented persistent place memory and blocked late-LTP. Fourth, symmetrically, when spatial memory was encoded using strong reward, this memory persisted for 24 h unless encoding occurred under hippocampal D1/D5 receptor blockade. Novelty exploration before this encoding rescued the drug-induced memory impairment. Parallel effects were observed in LTP. These findings can be explained by the synaptic tagging and capture hypothesis.

Citing Articles

Light-exercise-induced dopaminergic and noradrenergic stimulation in the dorsal hippocampus: Using a rat physiological exercise model.

Hiraga T, Hata T, Soya S, Shimoda R, Takahashi K, Soya M FASEB J. 2024; 38(24):e70215.

PMID: 39668509 PMC: 11638517. DOI: 10.1096/fj.202400418RRR.


Linking new information to a short-lasting memory trace induces consolidation in the hippocampus.

Soliani A, Baptista J, Muratori B, Correa L, Cerutti S iScience. 2024; 27(12):111320.

PMID: 39640594 PMC: 11617307. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.111320.


Hippocampal contextualization of social rewards in mice.

Duarte J, Nguyen R, Kyprou M, Li K, Milentijevic A, Cerquetella C Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):9493.

PMID: 39489746 PMC: 11532361. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53866-2.


Reflecting on 50 years of long-term potentiation: Insights from the Royal Society's LTP50 conference.

Mitchell-Heggs R, Tse D Brain Neurosci Adv. 2024; 8:23982128241288004.

PMID: 39431202 PMC: 11489908. DOI: 10.1177/23982128241288004.


Blockade of dopamine D3 receptors improves hippocampal synaptic function and rescues age-related cognitive phenotype.

Tropea M, Melone M, Li Puma D, Vacanti V, Aceto G, Bandiera B Aging Cell. 2024; 23(11):e14291.

PMID: 39236310 PMC: 11561665. DOI: 10.1111/acel.14291.


References
1.
Lisman J, Grace A . The hippocampal-VTA loop: controlling the entry of information into long-term memory. Neuron. 2005; 46(5):703-13. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2005.05.002. View

2.
Martin K, Casadio A, Zhu H, Yaping E, Rose J, Chen M . Synapse-specific, long-term facilitation of aplysia sensory to motor synapses: a function for local protein synthesis in memory storage. Cell. 1998; 91(7):927-38. DOI: 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)80484-5. View

3.
Bliss T, Collingridge G . A synaptic model of memory: long-term potentiation in the hippocampus. Nature. 1993; 361(6407):31-9. DOI: 10.1038/361031a0. View

4.
Gradinaru V, Zhang F, Ramakrishnan C, Mattis J, Prakash R, Diester I . Molecular and cellular approaches for diversifying and extending optogenetics. Cell. 2010; 141(1):154-165. PMC: 4160532. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2010.02.037. View

5.
Day M, Langston R, Morris R . Glutamate-receptor-mediated encoding and retrieval of paired-associate learning. Nature. 2003; 424(6945):205-9. DOI: 10.1038/nature01769. View