AI Article Synopsis

  • Research focuses on the prelimbic (PL) cortex's role in fear memory retrieval, highlighting its importance in both recent and remote memories.
  • A new mouse model (TRAP2) reveals that PL neuron activity during later memory retrieval is critical for reactivating memories and influencing behavior more than those activated during learning or early retrieval.
  • PL neuron activity during the learning phase is necessary for the reorganization of neural networks that facilitate effective remote memory retrieval, with later-activated neurons showing stronger connections to cortical targets.

Article Abstract

Memories of fearful events can last a lifetime. The prelimbic (PL) cortex, a subregion of prefrontal cortex, plays a critical role in fear memory retrieval over time. Most studies have focused on acquisition, consolidation, and retrieval of recent memories, but much less is known about the neural mechanisms of remote memory. Using a new knock-in mouse for activity-dependent genetic labeling (TRAP2), we demonstrate that neuronal ensembles in the PL cortex are dynamic. PL neurons TRAPed during later memory retrievals are more likely to be reactivated and make larger behavioral contributions to remote memory retrieval compared to those TRAPed during learning or early memory retrieval. PL activity during learning is required to initiate this time-dependent reorganization in PL ensembles underlying memory retrieval. Finally, while neurons TRAPed during earlier and later retrievals have similar broad projections throughout the brain, PL neurons TRAPed later have a stronger functional recruitment of cortical targets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6387639PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41593-018-0318-7DOI Listing

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