Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Amnesia after repeated head impact is caused by impaired synaptic plasticity in the memory engram

View through CrossRef
Sub-concussive head impacts are associated with the development of acute and chronic cognitive deficits. We recently reported that high-frequency head impact (HFHI) causes chronic cognitive deficits in mice through synaptic changes. To better understand the mechanisms underlying HFHI-induced memory decline, we used TRAP2/Ai32 transgenic mice to enable visualization and manipulation of memory engrams.We labeled the fear memory engram in male and female mice exposed to an aversive experience and subjected them to sham or HFHI. Upon subsequent exposure to natural memory recall cues, sham, but not HFHI mice, successfully retrieved fearful memories. In sham mice the hippocampal engram neurons exhibited synaptic plasticity, evident in amplified AMPA:NMDA ratio, enhanced AMPA-weighted tau, and increased dendritic spine volume compared to non-engram neurons. In contrast, although HFHI mice retained a comparable number of hippocampal engram neurons, these neurons did not undergo synaptic plasticity. This lack of plasticity coincided with impaired activation of the engram network, leading to retrograde amnesia in HFHI mice. We validated that the memory deficits induced by HFHI stem from synaptic plasticity impairments by artificially activating the engram using optogenetics, and found that stimulated memory recall was identical in both sham and HFHI mice.Our work shows that chronic cognitive impairment after HFHI is a result of deficiencies in synaptic plasticity instead of a loss in neuronal infrastructure, and we can reinstate a forgotten memory in the amnestic brain by stimulating the memory engram. Targeting synaptic plasticity may have therapeutic potential for treating memory impairments caused by repeated head impacts.
Title: Amnesia after repeated head impact is caused by impaired synaptic plasticity in the memory engram
Description:
Sub-concussive head impacts are associated with the development of acute and chronic cognitive deficits.
We recently reported that high-frequency head impact (HFHI) causes chronic cognitive deficits in mice through synaptic changes.
To better understand the mechanisms underlying HFHI-induced memory decline, we used TRAP2/Ai32 transgenic mice to enable visualization and manipulation of memory engrams.
We labeled the fear memory engram in male and female mice exposed to an aversive experience and subjected them to sham or HFHI.
Upon subsequent exposure to natural memory recall cues, sham, but not HFHI mice, successfully retrieved fearful memories.
In sham mice the hippocampal engram neurons exhibited synaptic plasticity, evident in amplified AMPA:NMDA ratio, enhanced AMPA-weighted tau, and increased dendritic spine volume compared to non-engram neurons.
In contrast, although HFHI mice retained a comparable number of hippocampal engram neurons, these neurons did not undergo synaptic plasticity.
This lack of plasticity coincided with impaired activation of the engram network, leading to retrograde amnesia in HFHI mice.
We validated that the memory deficits induced by HFHI stem from synaptic plasticity impairments by artificially activating the engram using optogenetics, and found that stimulated memory recall was identical in both sham and HFHI mice.
Our work shows that chronic cognitive impairment after HFHI is a result of deficiencies in synaptic plasticity instead of a loss in neuronal infrastructure, and we can reinstate a forgotten memory in the amnestic brain by stimulating the memory engram.
Targeting synaptic plasticity may have therapeutic potential for treating memory impairments caused by repeated head impacts.

Related Results

Non-synaptic plasticity enables memory-dependent local learning
Non-synaptic plasticity enables memory-dependent local learning
Abstract Synaptic plasticity is essential for memory formation and learning in the brain. In addition, recent results indicate that non-synaptic plasticity processe...
Synaptic Integration
Synaptic Integration
Abstract Neurons in the brain receive thousands of synaptic inputs from other neurons. Synaptic integration is the term used to describe how neu...
Neuromodulation of Memory Formation and Extinction
Neuromodulation of Memory Formation and Extinction
Memory retrieval is mediated by discharges of acetylcholine, glutamate, gammaaminobutyric acid, norepinephrine, and serotonin/5-hydroxytryptamine circuits. These projections and me...
Brain-wide representational drift: memory consolidation and entropic force
Brain-wide representational drift: memory consolidation and entropic force
Memory engrams change on the microscopic level with time and experience as the neurons that compose them switch in a process termed representational drift. On the macroscopic level...
Non-synaptic plasticity enables memory-dependent local learning
Non-synaptic plasticity enables memory-dependent local learning
Synaptic plasticity is essential for memory formation and learning in the brain. In addition, recent results indicate that non-synaptic plasticity processes such as the regulation ...
Amnésia Global Transitória documentada pela ressonância magnética
Amnésia Global Transitória documentada pela ressonância magnética
Introdução: A disfunção patológica da memória é denominada amnésia e ocorre em associação com uma variedade de condições neurológicas, que perturbam o cérebro e, em particular, o h...
Role of DNA Methylation in Mechanisms of Anterograde Amnesia
Role of DNA Methylation in Mechanisms of Anterograde Amnesia
Abstract Previously, we found that impairment of conditioned food aversion memory consolidation or reconsolidation in snails by NMDA glutamate receptors antagonists led to ...
Interaction between theta-phase and spike-timing dependent plasticity simulates theta induced memory effects
Interaction between theta-phase and spike-timing dependent plasticity simulates theta induced memory effects
AbstractRodent studies suggest that spike timing relative to hippocampal theta activity determines whether potentiation or depression of synapses arise. Such changes also depend on...

Back to Top