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Neurobiology of Memory
Dr Ravi Soni
Senior Resident-I
Dept. of Geriatric Mental Health
KGMC, LKO
Discussion over…
• Anatomical and Functional organization of memory
• Hippocampus formation
• Afferents and efferents from hippocampus formation
• Learning and memory
• Types of memory
• Cellular and molecular process in Short term and Long term
Memory
• Molecular mechanisms in Implicit memory
• Molecular mechanisms in Explicit Memory
• Long term Potentiation in Hippocampus
• Plasticity
ANATOMICAL AND FUNCTIONAL
ORGANIZATION OF MEMORY
Introduction to the Limbic System
• Anatomically refers to areas surrounding the
diencephalon (limbus = border) and bordering the
cerebral cortex.
• The “C”-shaped hippocampal formation and includes the
amygdala, cingulate and parahippocampal cortices.
The key to learning, memory, and behavior (including
emotional behavior) – of paramount importance in
psychiatry.
The Limbic System
Look!!
Posterior section: Hippocampus, Fornix
Divisions or nuclei of
hippocampal formation
Parasagital section
Note the hippocampal formation, fornix, and amygdala
I. Anatomical Location and Overview.
A. Limbic association cortex – surrounding
diencephalon
-medial + inferior (orbital) surface 
cingulate gyrus, parahippocampal gyrus,
orbital gyrus, temporal pole.
Limbic System: Cortical Areas
Note: surrounding
diencephalon, medial +
inferior (orbital) surface

[cinglulate gyrus, parahipp
gyrus, orbital gyrus,
temporal pole].
B. the Hippocampal Formation and Amygdala.
Note the “C” shape, along with the major output paths for the
hippocampus: the fornix.
II. Hippocampal Formation:
Components
A subcortical structure composed of allocortex.
A central function: Consolidation of STMs into
LTMs (+ many other limbic functions through
complex interconnections).
Note the 3 components
Neocortex and Allocortex
More on
these 3
layers later
Hippocampal Formation:
Circuitry
A.Components and structure –
a banana-shaped structure with its
components (dentate, hipp,
subiculum) folded upon one
another like a “jelly roll”.
Inputs are from entorhinal
cortex, which collects info
from other association areas
dentate gyrus
hipp formation + subculum
output to fornix and
also back to entorhinal cortex
Hippocampal Formation:
Input and Output
Afferent
Efferent
Serial and Parallel Processing of Hippocampal Circuits
Hippocampal Circuits
Fornix
branch
(PostcommisuralBranch)
Fornix
(Precommissural)
(septal-hippocampal pathway)
Affects - Theta rhythm (4-8Hz)
(Hippocampal commissure)
(Perforant
&
alvear path)
Afferents
Efferents
HIPPOCAMPUS
(Cortico-entorhinal projections)
ERC/Sub
(PHG)
Cortex
Septal nuclei
Mammillary Body
Contralateral
Hippocampus
1. & 2.
3. 4.
The Hippocampus Dentate Complex
(HC-DG)
Afferent Pathways
Pyramidal cell
(CA1,2)
PHG (ERC, Sub)
1. Perforant Pathway: PHG (ERC) --> DG
Also ….
2. Alvear Pathway: PHG --> CA1
3. Septo-hippocampal path (via fornix): Septal nuclei --> DG
4. Hippocampal commissure (connects bilateral hippocampi)
Dentate gyrus
(granule cells)
(mossy fibers)
Pyramidal cell
(CA3)
(schaffer collaterals)
1. (perforant path)
(Also note: this efferent path
closes the HC circuit loop!)
2. (alvear path)
Septal nuclei
3. (septo-hippocampal
path - thru fornix)
Papez’ Circuit:
Fornix  mammillary bodies
Anterior Thalamic nucleus
mammillothalamic
tract
Cingulate gyrus
Entorhinal cortex
Hippocampal
formation
Input for memory consolidation
• Korsokoff’s Syndrome: thiamine deficiency (i.e.,
from alcoholism)  degeneration of mammillary
bodies.
• Other output: via entorhinal cortex to a number
of association areas, involve the prefrontal cortex
(control of mood and behaviours).
C. Anatomy and Information Flow in Greater
Detail.
Cytoarchitechture dimensions of hippocampus
(Ammon’s horn): CA1, CA2, CA3, CA4 (hilus)
[CA = coronus ammonis].
Medial Temporal Circuitry
Adjacent MTL cortices :
Entorhinal (ERC), Perirhinal (PRC) Parahippocampal (PHC)
Hippocampus (HC) proper :
Dentate Gyrus (DG), CA3, CA1, and Subiculum (Sub)
PRC
PHC
ERC
Sub
DG CA 3
CA 1
Fornix
Pyramidal cells
Pyramidal cells
Schaffer
collaterals
Pyramidal cells
Granule cells
Mossy
fibers
The Hippocampus
CA fields
A) Lateral Ventricle, B) ependymal glia (ventricular surface), C) Alvear Layer, (pyramidal axons)
3 layers of hippocampus (archicortex):
1. Polymorph Layer (pyramidal axons & basket cells (-))
2. Hippocampal pyramidal layer (pyramidal cell bodies)
3. Molecular Layer (pyramidal dendrites)
A) Lateral ventricle
B) Ependymal glia
C) Alvear layer
1. Polymorph Layer
2. Pyramidal Layer
3. Molecular Layer(pyramidal dendrite)
(pyramidal axon)
(pyramidal cell body)
(Corkin, Amaral, Gonzalez, Johnson and Hyman J. Neuro, 1997)
(Scoville and Milner, 1957)
Patient H.M. and the Human MTL
• Suffered head injury @age 9
– Developed severe epilepsy
• Surgeon surgically removed the medial
temporal lobe bilaterally
• HM suffered severe anterograde and
temporally graded retrograde amnesia
• Spared skill learning
Different regions of brain involved in specific
memory
Cellular and Molecular
Mechanisms of Memory
Learning
• Learning: relatively permanent change in an
individual's behavior or behavior potential (or
capability) as a result of experience or practice.
1. Change in behavior
2. Change takes place due to practice or experience
3. Change is relatively permanent
MEMORY
• Memory: is complex cognitive or mental process that
involves encoding, storage and retrieval of the
information.
I. Encoding: is process of receiving input and
transforming it into a form or code, which can be
stored.
II. Storage: is process of actually putting coded
information into memory.
III.Retrieval: is process of gaining access to stored,
coded information when it is needed.
Two Types of Memory
Explicit Memory
• Factual knowledge of people, places, things, and events, along with
concepts derived from this knowledge
• Well developed in vertebrate brain
• Explicit (declarative) memory is recalled by conscious effort, and can
involve assembly and association of many pieces of information in
different modalities
• Dependent on the structures like medial temporal lobe of the cerebral
cortex and hippocampus formation
• Declarative memory can be further classified as episodic or
autobiographic memory and semantic memory.
Types of Explicit Memory
 Episodic memory:
• allows us to remember
personal events and
experience and, being a link
between what we are and
what we have been, gives
us the sense of our
individuality.
 Semantic memory:
• is a sort of public memory
for facts and notions, be
they general or
autobiographical
• Over time, autobiographical
memory shades into
semantic memory so that
the experience of an event
is remembered as the
simple occurrence of such
event
Implicit memory
• It refers to information storage to perform various reflexive or perceptual tasks is also
referred to as non-declarative memory because it is recalled unconsciously.
• When we use implicit memory, we act automatically and we are not aware of being
recalling memory traces.
• Implicit memory is a heterogeneous collection of memory functions and types of
learned behaviors such as
– reflexive learning (sensitization, habituation),
– classical conditioning,
– fear conditioning,
– Procedural memory (for skills and habits) and
– priming (the recall of words or objects from a previous unconscious exposure to them).
• Here simple associative form of memory are classical conditioning etc.
• Non associative forms such as sensitization and habituation
• It involves the cerebellum, the striatum, the amygdala, the neocortex and in the
simplest cases, the motor and sensory pathways recruited for particular perceptual or
motor skills utilized during the learning process
Difference
Implicit Memory
• Implicit memory, such as
learning to ride a bike, takes
time and many attempts to
build up
• Implicit memory is much
more robust and may last
for all our life even in the
absence of further practice
Explicit Memory
• Explicit memory, such as
learning a page of history
or a telephone number, is
more immediate and
implies a smaller effort.
• explicit memory fades
relatively rapidly in the
absence of recall and
refreshing,
From short- to long-term memories: memory consolidation,
forgetfulness and recall
• Learning induces cellular and molecular changes that facilitate or impair
communication among neurons and are fundamental for memory
storage.
• If learning brings about changes in “synaptic strength” within neuronal
circuits, the persistence of these changes represents the way memories
are stored.
• Short-term memory is believed to involve only functional changes in pre-
existing neuronal networks mediated by a fine tuning of multiple
intracellular signal transductions systems.
• These short-lived changes can undergo either of two processes:
– either fade out with time (forgetfulness) or
– be reinforced and transformed into long-term memory by a process called memory
consolidation
• Forgetfulness is at least as important as consolidation.
• To be consolidated, functional changes have to be followed by gene
transcription and protein synthesis that produce permanent phenotypic
changes in the neuron associated with structural rearrangements in
neuronal networks.
• Thus, consolidation of memories is abolished by mRNA and protein
synthesis inhibitors.
Cellular and Molecular processes in STM
1. changes in the excitation-secretion
coupling at the presynaptic level
promoted by changes in channel
conductances due to phosphorylation
and Ca2+ influx;
2. Ca2+ influx at the postsynaptic level
through NMDA glutamate receptors by
Ca2+/calmodulin kinases, protein
kinase C and tyrosine kinases
promoting phosphorylation of
neurotransmitter receptors and
generation of retrograde messengers
(such as nitric oxide and arachidonic
acid) that reach the presynaptic
terminal and increase
neurotransmitter release in response
to action potentials.
• The activation of the molecules
involved in these signaling pathways
can last for minutes and thereby
represent a sort of short-term
“molecular memory”
Role of CaMKII and PP1
• A very important role in the establishment of short-term memories is
played by the balance between Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein
kinase II (CaMKII) and protein phosphatase 1 (PP1).
• Upon Ca2+ influx during training, CaMKII undergoes an
autophosphorylation reaction that transforms it into a constitutively
activated kinase. The “switched-on” CaMKII, however, is returned to the
resting state by PP1 that thereby has an inhibitory effect on learning
• Thus, the antagonistic interactions between CaMKII and PP1 represent a
push-pull system that plays a fundamental role during learning as well as
in the delicate balance between maintaining and forgetting stored
memories
Consolidation into Long Term Memory
• The sustained activation of the same pathways promotes memory consolidation by
affecting the gene transcription and translation.
• Sustained stimulation leads to persistent activation of the protein kinase A (PKA) and
MAP kinase Erk (MAPK) pathways.
• PKA phosphorylates and activates the transcriptional activator CREB1a, whereas MAPK
phosphorylates and inactivates the transcriptional repressor CREB2.
• The CREB family of transcription regulators is highly conserved across evolution and
represents the major switch involved in the transformation of short-term memory into
long-term memory.
• The CREB target genes, whose transcription is regulated during consolidation, include a
set of immediate- early genes (such as C/EBP or zif268) that affect transcription of
downstream genes.
• This results in changes, both increase and decreases, in the expression of an array of
proteins involved in protein synthesis, axon growth, synaptic structure and function
Molecular mechanisms of short- and long-term memory.
From Synapses to memory
• Memory is a special case of the general biological phenomenon of neural plasticity.
• Neurons can show history-dependent activity by responding differently as a function
of prior input, and this plasticity of nerve cells and synapses is the basis of memory.
• Experience can lead to structural change at the synapse, including alterations in the
strength of existing synapses and alterations in the number of synaptic contacts along
specific pathways.
Plasticity
• Neurobiological evidence supports two basic conclusions.
1. Short-lasting memory: which may last for seconds or
minutes, depending on specific synaptic events, including an
increase in neurotransmitter release.
2. long-lasting memory: depends on new protein synthesis, the
physical growth of neural processes, and an increase in the
number of synaptic connections
• implicit memory can also be studied in a variety of simple
reflex systems, including those of higher invertebrates,
whereas explicit forms can best (and perhaps only) be studied
in mammals.
Aplysia Californica
• Implicit memory can be studied through the gill- and siphon withdrawal reflex of the marine
invertebrate Aplysia californica (sea snail)
• Aplysia is capable of associative learning (including classic conditioning and operant conditioning) and
nonassociative learning (habituation and sensitization).
• Aplysia is able to learn very peculiar behaviors that, upon practice, can be consolidated into long-term
memories.
• The animal learns to respond progressively more weakly to repeated innocuous stimuli (e.g.
a light tactile stimulus), a behavior called habituation, and to reinforce the response to
repeated noxious stimuli (e.g. a painful electrical shock), a behavior known as sensitization.
• THESE IMPLICIT MEMORIES ARE STORED IN SPINAL REFLEX PATHWAYS
Nonassociative Learning in Aplysia
• Sensitization had been studied using the gill-withdrawal reflex, a
defensive reaction in which tactile stimulation causes the gill and siphon
to retract.
• When tactile stimulation is preceded by sensory stimulation to the head
or tail, gill withdrawal is facilitated.
• The cellular changes underlying this sensitization begin when a sensory
neuron activates a modulatory interneuron, which enhances the strength
of synapses within the circuitry responsible for the reflex.
• This modulation depends on a second-messenger system in which
intracellular molecules (including cyclic adenosine monophosphate
[cAMP] and cAMP-dependent protein kinase) lead to enhanced
transmitter release that lasts for minutes in the reflex pathway.
Habituation in Aplysia
• If the siphon of the animal is
stimulated mechanically the
animal withdraws the gill,
presumably for protection.
• With repeated activation, the
stimulus leads to a decrease in
the number of dopamine-
containing vesicles that release
their contents onto the
motoneuron.
Synaptic Depression
Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3rd Ed,
Bear, Connors, and Paradiso Copyright ©
2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Nonassociative Learning in Aplysia
Sensitization of the Gill-Withdrawal Reflex
Synaptic Potentiation
Long-term storage of implicit memory for sensitization involves changes
shown in last slide plus changes in protein synthesis that result in formation
of new synaptic connections.
• With only short-term tail stimulation,
the sensitization will fairly quickly
disappear when tail stimulation ceases.
• However, the sensitization can be
made relatively permanent by
repeated tail stimulation.
• This long-term sensitization (and also
long-term habituation) occurs because
there are structural changes that occur
in the presynaptic terminals (sensory
neuron 1, for example).
• With sensitization, there is an up to 2-
fold increase in the number of synaptic
terminals in both sensory and
motoneurons.
• Alternatively, with habituation, there is
a one-third reduction in the number of
synaptic terminals. Both of these
changes require altered protein
synthesis by mechanisms shown in Fig.
18-7.
Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3rd Ed,
Bear, Connors, and Paradiso Copyright ©
2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Associative Learning in Aplysia
Classical conditioning CS-US pairing
Associative learning in Aplysia
The molecular basis for classical conditioning in Aplysia
Long term Potentiation
• A large amount of studies demonstrated that LTP is indeed a valid model
of “memory storage”:
• LTP is observed when a postsynaptic neuron is persistently depolarized
after a high-frequency burst of presynaptic neural firing.
• LTP has a number of properties that make it suitable as a physiological
substrate of memory.
• It is associative, in that it depends on the co-occurrence of presynaptic
activity and postsynaptic depolarization.
• LTP occurs prominently in the hippocampus, a structure that is important
for memory.
• The induction of LTP is known to be mediated postsynaptically and to
involve activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, which
permits the influx of calcium into the postsynaptic cell.
• LTP is maintained by an increase in the number of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-
methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA; non-NMDA) receptors in the
postsynaptic cell and also possibly by increased transmitter release.
Experimental setup for LTP
• A. Experimental setup for demon-
strating LTP in the hippocampus.
The Schaffer collateral pathway is
stimulated to cause a response in
pyramidal cells of CA1.
• B. Comparison of EPSP size in early
and late LTP with the early phase
evoked by a single train and the
late phase by 4 trains of pulses.
(Kandel, ER, JH Schwartz and TM
Jessell (2000) Principles of Neural
Science. New York: McGraw-Hill.)
• During normal synaptic transmission glutamate binds to non-NMDA receptors allowing
cations to flow through the channels and the cell membrane to hypopolarize.
• Glutamate also binds to metabotropic receptors, activating PLC, and to NMDA
receptors.
• NMDA receptor channels can bind glutamate but no current will flow through the
channels unless the Mg++
that binds to the channel lumen is displaced. The latter event
can be effected by hypopolarizing the cell.
• the high-frequency stimulation opens non-NMDA glutamate channels leading to
hypopolarization.
• This dislodges Mg++
from the NMDA glutamate channels, and Ca++
enters the cells.
• The calcium triggers the activity of Ca-dependent kinases, PKC and Ca-calmodulin, and
tyrosine kinase. Ca-calmodulin kinase phosphorylates non-NMDA channels, increasing their
sensitivity to glutamate and a messenger is sent retrogradely to the presynaptic terminal to
increase the release of transmitter substance.
• In the late phase of LTP, calcium
enters the cell and triggers Ca-
calmodulin, which in turn
activates adenylyl cyclase and
cAMP kinase.
• The latter translates to the
nucleus of the cell and starts
processes that lead to protein
synthesis and to structural
changes, i.e., the formation of
new synapses. Many scientists
believe that this is the substrate
for long-term memory–the
formation of new synapses.
Facts to be highlighted
• LTP induced by an experience, is inhibited by a novel experience
administered soon (within 1 hour) after the first one, whereas an LTP
established for more than 1 hour is immune to this reversal mechanism.
• Critical event in determining the retention of information may consist in the
stabilization of the potentiated Hippocampal synapses in order to resist to
LTP reversal upon new information.
• Although hippocampus is fundamental to acquire new memories, it appears to
be dispensable after the memory has been fully consolidated.
• Permanent memories are distributed among different cortical regions
according to the various perceptual features and that these various aspects
are linked so that, upon recall, the different components of a memory are
bound together to reproduce the memory in its integrity.
• hippocampus is still necessary to bind together the components of recent
memories, whereas more remote explicit memories can be recalled
independently of the hippocampus as the connections between cortical
representation strengthen.
Plasticity-Some facts
• Plasticity by Santiago Ramon y Cajal as “the property by virtue of which
sustained functional changes occur in particular neuronal systems
following the administration of appropriate environmental stimuli or the
combination of different stimuli”.
• Most distinctive feature of the nervous system is the astonishing ability to
adapt to the environment and to improve its performance over time and
experience
• Synaptic connections that are scarcely used become weaker and weaker
and eventually disappear
• Synapses that are heavily used become stronger and stronger and
eventually increase in number
Continued…..
• Neural plasticity represents the basis of the higher brain functions such as
learning and memory
• Built-in property of neural plasticity allows experience to shape both
functionally and structurally the nervous system.
• synaptic strength can be finely tuned over
– a short or even a long time scale by a combination of factors including previous activity
of the network, generation of second messengers, functional changes in pre- and post-
synaptic proteins as well as regulation of the expression of genes implicated in growth,
survival and synaptic transmission
• This results in changes in the efficiency of synaptic transmission
– That can last from fraction of seconds to minutes in case of short-term synaptic
plasticity (including paired-pulse facilitation or depression, augmentation, depression,
post-tetanic potentiation)
– That can last to hours, days and months in case of long-term synaptic plasticity (long-
term potentiation, long-term depression).
THE END
THANK YOU

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Neurobiology of memory

  • 1. Neurobiology of Memory Dr Ravi Soni Senior Resident-I Dept. of Geriatric Mental Health KGMC, LKO
  • 2. Discussion over… • Anatomical and Functional organization of memory • Hippocampus formation • Afferents and efferents from hippocampus formation • Learning and memory • Types of memory • Cellular and molecular process in Short term and Long term Memory • Molecular mechanisms in Implicit memory • Molecular mechanisms in Explicit Memory • Long term Potentiation in Hippocampus • Plasticity
  • 4. Introduction to the Limbic System • Anatomically refers to areas surrounding the diencephalon (limbus = border) and bordering the cerebral cortex. • The “C”-shaped hippocampal formation and includes the amygdala, cingulate and parahippocampal cortices. The key to learning, memory, and behavior (including emotional behavior) – of paramount importance in psychiatry.
  • 7. Posterior section: Hippocampus, Fornix Divisions or nuclei of hippocampal formation
  • 8. Parasagital section Note the hippocampal formation, fornix, and amygdala
  • 9. I. Anatomical Location and Overview. A. Limbic association cortex – surrounding diencephalon -medial + inferior (orbital) surface  cingulate gyrus, parahippocampal gyrus, orbital gyrus, temporal pole.
  • 10. Limbic System: Cortical Areas Note: surrounding diencephalon, medial + inferior (orbital) surface  [cinglulate gyrus, parahipp gyrus, orbital gyrus, temporal pole].
  • 11. B. the Hippocampal Formation and Amygdala. Note the “C” shape, along with the major output paths for the hippocampus: the fornix.
  • 12. II. Hippocampal Formation: Components A subcortical structure composed of allocortex. A central function: Consolidation of STMs into LTMs (+ many other limbic functions through complex interconnections). Note the 3 components
  • 13. Neocortex and Allocortex More on these 3 layers later
  • 14. Hippocampal Formation: Circuitry A.Components and structure – a banana-shaped structure with its components (dentate, hipp, subiculum) folded upon one another like a “jelly roll”. Inputs are from entorhinal cortex, which collects info from other association areas dentate gyrus hipp formation + subculum output to fornix and also back to entorhinal cortex
  • 15. Hippocampal Formation: Input and Output Afferent Efferent
  • 16. Serial and Parallel Processing of Hippocampal Circuits
  • 17. Hippocampal Circuits Fornix branch (PostcommisuralBranch) Fornix (Precommissural) (septal-hippocampal pathway) Affects - Theta rhythm (4-8Hz) (Hippocampal commissure) (Perforant & alvear path) Afferents Efferents HIPPOCAMPUS (Cortico-entorhinal projections) ERC/Sub (PHG) Cortex Septal nuclei Mammillary Body Contralateral Hippocampus 1. & 2. 3. 4.
  • 18. The Hippocampus Dentate Complex (HC-DG) Afferent Pathways Pyramidal cell (CA1,2) PHG (ERC, Sub) 1. Perforant Pathway: PHG (ERC) --> DG Also …. 2. Alvear Pathway: PHG --> CA1 3. Septo-hippocampal path (via fornix): Septal nuclei --> DG 4. Hippocampal commissure (connects bilateral hippocampi) Dentate gyrus (granule cells) (mossy fibers) Pyramidal cell (CA3) (schaffer collaterals) 1. (perforant path) (Also note: this efferent path closes the HC circuit loop!) 2. (alvear path) Septal nuclei 3. (septo-hippocampal path - thru fornix)
  • 19. Papez’ Circuit: Fornix  mammillary bodies Anterior Thalamic nucleus mammillothalamic tract Cingulate gyrus Entorhinal cortex Hippocampal formation Input for memory consolidation
  • 20. • Korsokoff’s Syndrome: thiamine deficiency (i.e., from alcoholism)  degeneration of mammillary bodies. • Other output: via entorhinal cortex to a number of association areas, involve the prefrontal cortex (control of mood and behaviours).
  • 21. C. Anatomy and Information Flow in Greater Detail. Cytoarchitechture dimensions of hippocampus (Ammon’s horn): CA1, CA2, CA3, CA4 (hilus) [CA = coronus ammonis].
  • 22. Medial Temporal Circuitry Adjacent MTL cortices : Entorhinal (ERC), Perirhinal (PRC) Parahippocampal (PHC) Hippocampus (HC) proper : Dentate Gyrus (DG), CA3, CA1, and Subiculum (Sub) PRC PHC ERC Sub DG CA 3 CA 1 Fornix Pyramidal cells Pyramidal cells Schaffer collaterals Pyramidal cells Granule cells Mossy fibers
  • 23. The Hippocampus CA fields A) Lateral Ventricle, B) ependymal glia (ventricular surface), C) Alvear Layer, (pyramidal axons) 3 layers of hippocampus (archicortex): 1. Polymorph Layer (pyramidal axons & basket cells (-)) 2. Hippocampal pyramidal layer (pyramidal cell bodies) 3. Molecular Layer (pyramidal dendrites) A) Lateral ventricle B) Ependymal glia C) Alvear layer 1. Polymorph Layer 2. Pyramidal Layer 3. Molecular Layer(pyramidal dendrite) (pyramidal axon) (pyramidal cell body)
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26. (Corkin, Amaral, Gonzalez, Johnson and Hyman J. Neuro, 1997) (Scoville and Milner, 1957) Patient H.M. and the Human MTL • Suffered head injury @age 9 – Developed severe epilepsy • Surgeon surgically removed the medial temporal lobe bilaterally • HM suffered severe anterograde and temporally graded retrograde amnesia • Spared skill learning
  • 27. Different regions of brain involved in specific memory
  • 29. Learning • Learning: relatively permanent change in an individual's behavior or behavior potential (or capability) as a result of experience or practice. 1. Change in behavior 2. Change takes place due to practice or experience 3. Change is relatively permanent
  • 30. MEMORY • Memory: is complex cognitive or mental process that involves encoding, storage and retrieval of the information. I. Encoding: is process of receiving input and transforming it into a form or code, which can be stored. II. Storage: is process of actually putting coded information into memory. III.Retrieval: is process of gaining access to stored, coded information when it is needed.
  • 31. Two Types of Memory
  • 32. Explicit Memory • Factual knowledge of people, places, things, and events, along with concepts derived from this knowledge • Well developed in vertebrate brain • Explicit (declarative) memory is recalled by conscious effort, and can involve assembly and association of many pieces of information in different modalities • Dependent on the structures like medial temporal lobe of the cerebral cortex and hippocampus formation • Declarative memory can be further classified as episodic or autobiographic memory and semantic memory.
  • 33. Types of Explicit Memory  Episodic memory: • allows us to remember personal events and experience and, being a link between what we are and what we have been, gives us the sense of our individuality.  Semantic memory: • is a sort of public memory for facts and notions, be they general or autobiographical • Over time, autobiographical memory shades into semantic memory so that the experience of an event is remembered as the simple occurrence of such event
  • 34. Implicit memory • It refers to information storage to perform various reflexive or perceptual tasks is also referred to as non-declarative memory because it is recalled unconsciously. • When we use implicit memory, we act automatically and we are not aware of being recalling memory traces. • Implicit memory is a heterogeneous collection of memory functions and types of learned behaviors such as – reflexive learning (sensitization, habituation), – classical conditioning, – fear conditioning, – Procedural memory (for skills and habits) and – priming (the recall of words or objects from a previous unconscious exposure to them). • Here simple associative form of memory are classical conditioning etc. • Non associative forms such as sensitization and habituation • It involves the cerebellum, the striatum, the amygdala, the neocortex and in the simplest cases, the motor and sensory pathways recruited for particular perceptual or motor skills utilized during the learning process
  • 35. Difference Implicit Memory • Implicit memory, such as learning to ride a bike, takes time and many attempts to build up • Implicit memory is much more robust and may last for all our life even in the absence of further practice Explicit Memory • Explicit memory, such as learning a page of history or a telephone number, is more immediate and implies a smaller effort. • explicit memory fades relatively rapidly in the absence of recall and refreshing,
  • 36. From short- to long-term memories: memory consolidation, forgetfulness and recall • Learning induces cellular and molecular changes that facilitate or impair communication among neurons and are fundamental for memory storage. • If learning brings about changes in “synaptic strength” within neuronal circuits, the persistence of these changes represents the way memories are stored. • Short-term memory is believed to involve only functional changes in pre- existing neuronal networks mediated by a fine tuning of multiple intracellular signal transductions systems. • These short-lived changes can undergo either of two processes: – either fade out with time (forgetfulness) or – be reinforced and transformed into long-term memory by a process called memory consolidation • Forgetfulness is at least as important as consolidation.
  • 37. • To be consolidated, functional changes have to be followed by gene transcription and protein synthesis that produce permanent phenotypic changes in the neuron associated with structural rearrangements in neuronal networks. • Thus, consolidation of memories is abolished by mRNA and protein synthesis inhibitors.
  • 38. Cellular and Molecular processes in STM 1. changes in the excitation-secretion coupling at the presynaptic level promoted by changes in channel conductances due to phosphorylation and Ca2+ influx; 2. Ca2+ influx at the postsynaptic level through NMDA glutamate receptors by Ca2+/calmodulin kinases, protein kinase C and tyrosine kinases promoting phosphorylation of neurotransmitter receptors and generation of retrograde messengers (such as nitric oxide and arachidonic acid) that reach the presynaptic terminal and increase neurotransmitter release in response to action potentials. • The activation of the molecules involved in these signaling pathways can last for minutes and thereby represent a sort of short-term “molecular memory”
  • 39. Role of CaMKII and PP1 • A very important role in the establishment of short-term memories is played by the balance between Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) and protein phosphatase 1 (PP1). • Upon Ca2+ influx during training, CaMKII undergoes an autophosphorylation reaction that transforms it into a constitutively activated kinase. The “switched-on” CaMKII, however, is returned to the resting state by PP1 that thereby has an inhibitory effect on learning • Thus, the antagonistic interactions between CaMKII and PP1 represent a push-pull system that plays a fundamental role during learning as well as in the delicate balance between maintaining and forgetting stored memories
  • 40. Consolidation into Long Term Memory • The sustained activation of the same pathways promotes memory consolidation by affecting the gene transcription and translation. • Sustained stimulation leads to persistent activation of the protein kinase A (PKA) and MAP kinase Erk (MAPK) pathways. • PKA phosphorylates and activates the transcriptional activator CREB1a, whereas MAPK phosphorylates and inactivates the transcriptional repressor CREB2. • The CREB family of transcription regulators is highly conserved across evolution and represents the major switch involved in the transformation of short-term memory into long-term memory. • The CREB target genes, whose transcription is regulated during consolidation, include a set of immediate- early genes (such as C/EBP or zif268) that affect transcription of downstream genes. • This results in changes, both increase and decreases, in the expression of an array of proteins involved in protein synthesis, axon growth, synaptic structure and function
  • 41. Molecular mechanisms of short- and long-term memory.
  • 42. From Synapses to memory • Memory is a special case of the general biological phenomenon of neural plasticity. • Neurons can show history-dependent activity by responding differently as a function of prior input, and this plasticity of nerve cells and synapses is the basis of memory. • Experience can lead to structural change at the synapse, including alterations in the strength of existing synapses and alterations in the number of synaptic contacts along specific pathways.
  • 43. Plasticity • Neurobiological evidence supports two basic conclusions. 1. Short-lasting memory: which may last for seconds or minutes, depending on specific synaptic events, including an increase in neurotransmitter release. 2. long-lasting memory: depends on new protein synthesis, the physical growth of neural processes, and an increase in the number of synaptic connections • implicit memory can also be studied in a variety of simple reflex systems, including those of higher invertebrates, whereas explicit forms can best (and perhaps only) be studied in mammals.
  • 44. Aplysia Californica • Implicit memory can be studied through the gill- and siphon withdrawal reflex of the marine invertebrate Aplysia californica (sea snail) • Aplysia is capable of associative learning (including classic conditioning and operant conditioning) and nonassociative learning (habituation and sensitization). • Aplysia is able to learn very peculiar behaviors that, upon practice, can be consolidated into long-term memories. • The animal learns to respond progressively more weakly to repeated innocuous stimuli (e.g. a light tactile stimulus), a behavior called habituation, and to reinforce the response to repeated noxious stimuli (e.g. a painful electrical shock), a behavior known as sensitization. • THESE IMPLICIT MEMORIES ARE STORED IN SPINAL REFLEX PATHWAYS
  • 45. Nonassociative Learning in Aplysia • Sensitization had been studied using the gill-withdrawal reflex, a defensive reaction in which tactile stimulation causes the gill and siphon to retract. • When tactile stimulation is preceded by sensory stimulation to the head or tail, gill withdrawal is facilitated. • The cellular changes underlying this sensitization begin when a sensory neuron activates a modulatory interneuron, which enhances the strength of synapses within the circuitry responsible for the reflex. • This modulation depends on a second-messenger system in which intracellular molecules (including cyclic adenosine monophosphate [cAMP] and cAMP-dependent protein kinase) lead to enhanced transmitter release that lasts for minutes in the reflex pathway.
  • 46. Habituation in Aplysia • If the siphon of the animal is stimulated mechanically the animal withdraws the gill, presumably for protection. • With repeated activation, the stimulus leads to a decrease in the number of dopamine- containing vesicles that release their contents onto the motoneuron. Synaptic Depression
  • 47. Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3rd Ed, Bear, Connors, and Paradiso Copyright © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Nonassociative Learning in Aplysia Sensitization of the Gill-Withdrawal Reflex Synaptic Potentiation
  • 48. Long-term storage of implicit memory for sensitization involves changes shown in last slide plus changes in protein synthesis that result in formation of new synaptic connections. • With only short-term tail stimulation, the sensitization will fairly quickly disappear when tail stimulation ceases. • However, the sensitization can be made relatively permanent by repeated tail stimulation. • This long-term sensitization (and also long-term habituation) occurs because there are structural changes that occur in the presynaptic terminals (sensory neuron 1, for example). • With sensitization, there is an up to 2- fold increase in the number of synaptic terminals in both sensory and motoneurons. • Alternatively, with habituation, there is a one-third reduction in the number of synaptic terminals. Both of these changes require altered protein synthesis by mechanisms shown in Fig. 18-7.
  • 49. Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3rd Ed, Bear, Connors, and Paradiso Copyright © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Associative Learning in Aplysia Classical conditioning CS-US pairing
  • 50. Associative learning in Aplysia The molecular basis for classical conditioning in Aplysia
  • 51. Long term Potentiation • A large amount of studies demonstrated that LTP is indeed a valid model of “memory storage”: • LTP is observed when a postsynaptic neuron is persistently depolarized after a high-frequency burst of presynaptic neural firing. • LTP has a number of properties that make it suitable as a physiological substrate of memory. • It is associative, in that it depends on the co-occurrence of presynaptic activity and postsynaptic depolarization. • LTP occurs prominently in the hippocampus, a structure that is important for memory. • The induction of LTP is known to be mediated postsynaptically and to involve activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, which permits the influx of calcium into the postsynaptic cell. • LTP is maintained by an increase in the number of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5- methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA; non-NMDA) receptors in the postsynaptic cell and also possibly by increased transmitter release.
  • 52. Experimental setup for LTP • A. Experimental setup for demon- strating LTP in the hippocampus. The Schaffer collateral pathway is stimulated to cause a response in pyramidal cells of CA1. • B. Comparison of EPSP size in early and late LTP with the early phase evoked by a single train and the late phase by 4 trains of pulses. (Kandel, ER, JH Schwartz and TM Jessell (2000) Principles of Neural Science. New York: McGraw-Hill.)
  • 53. • During normal synaptic transmission glutamate binds to non-NMDA receptors allowing cations to flow through the channels and the cell membrane to hypopolarize. • Glutamate also binds to metabotropic receptors, activating PLC, and to NMDA receptors. • NMDA receptor channels can bind glutamate but no current will flow through the channels unless the Mg++ that binds to the channel lumen is displaced. The latter event can be effected by hypopolarizing the cell.
  • 54. • the high-frequency stimulation opens non-NMDA glutamate channels leading to hypopolarization. • This dislodges Mg++ from the NMDA glutamate channels, and Ca++ enters the cells. • The calcium triggers the activity of Ca-dependent kinases, PKC and Ca-calmodulin, and tyrosine kinase. Ca-calmodulin kinase phosphorylates non-NMDA channels, increasing their sensitivity to glutamate and a messenger is sent retrogradely to the presynaptic terminal to increase the release of transmitter substance.
  • 55. • In the late phase of LTP, calcium enters the cell and triggers Ca- calmodulin, which in turn activates adenylyl cyclase and cAMP kinase. • The latter translates to the nucleus of the cell and starts processes that lead to protein synthesis and to structural changes, i.e., the formation of new synapses. Many scientists believe that this is the substrate for long-term memory–the formation of new synapses.
  • 56. Facts to be highlighted • LTP induced by an experience, is inhibited by a novel experience administered soon (within 1 hour) after the first one, whereas an LTP established for more than 1 hour is immune to this reversal mechanism. • Critical event in determining the retention of information may consist in the stabilization of the potentiated Hippocampal synapses in order to resist to LTP reversal upon new information. • Although hippocampus is fundamental to acquire new memories, it appears to be dispensable after the memory has been fully consolidated. • Permanent memories are distributed among different cortical regions according to the various perceptual features and that these various aspects are linked so that, upon recall, the different components of a memory are bound together to reproduce the memory in its integrity. • hippocampus is still necessary to bind together the components of recent memories, whereas more remote explicit memories can be recalled independently of the hippocampus as the connections between cortical representation strengthen.
  • 57. Plasticity-Some facts • Plasticity by Santiago Ramon y Cajal as “the property by virtue of which sustained functional changes occur in particular neuronal systems following the administration of appropriate environmental stimuli or the combination of different stimuli”. • Most distinctive feature of the nervous system is the astonishing ability to adapt to the environment and to improve its performance over time and experience • Synaptic connections that are scarcely used become weaker and weaker and eventually disappear • Synapses that are heavily used become stronger and stronger and eventually increase in number
  • 58. Continued….. • Neural plasticity represents the basis of the higher brain functions such as learning and memory • Built-in property of neural plasticity allows experience to shape both functionally and structurally the nervous system. • synaptic strength can be finely tuned over – a short or even a long time scale by a combination of factors including previous activity of the network, generation of second messengers, functional changes in pre- and post- synaptic proteins as well as regulation of the expression of genes implicated in growth, survival and synaptic transmission • This results in changes in the efficiency of synaptic transmission – That can last from fraction of seconds to minutes in case of short-term synaptic plasticity (including paired-pulse facilitation or depression, augmentation, depression, post-tetanic potentiation) – That can last to hours, days and months in case of long-term synaptic plasticity (long- term potentiation, long-term depression).