Associative memory stored by functional novel pathway rather than modifications of preexisting neuronal pathways.

J Neurosci

Sussex Centre for Neuroscience, School of Biology and Environmental Science, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QG, United Kingdom.

Published: April 2006

Associative conditioning involves changes in the processing pathways activated by sensory information to link the conditioned stimulus (CS) to the conditioned behavior. Thus, conditioning can recruit neuronal elements to form new pathways for the processing of the CS and/or can change the strength of existing pathways. Using a behavioral and systems level electrophysiological approach on a tractable invertebrate circuit generating feeding in the mollusk Lymnaea stagnalis, we identified three independent pathways for the processing of the CS amyl acetate used in appetitive conditioning. Two of these pathways, one suppressing and the other stimulating feeding, mediate responses to the CS in naive animals. The effects of these two pathways on feeding behavior are unaltered by conditioning. In contrast, the CS response of a third stimulatory pathway is significantly enhanced after conditioning, becoming an important contributor to the overall CS response. This is unusual because, in most of the previous examples in which naive animals already respond to the CS, memory formation results from changes in the strength of pathways that mediate the existing response. Here, we show that, in the molluscan feeding system, both modified and unmodified pathways are activated in parallel by the CS after conditioning, and it is their integration that results in the conditioned response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6673874PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0489-06.2006DOI Listing

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