Thursday, June 18, 2009
The ability to learn and to establish
new memories is essential to our daily existence and identity; enabling us to
navigate through the world. A new study by researchers at the Montreal
Neurological Institute and Hospital (The Neuro), McGill University and
University of California, Los Angeles has captured an image for the first time
of a mechanism, specifically protein translation, which underlies long-term
memory formation. The finding provides the first visual evidence that when a new
memory is formed new proteins are made locally at the synapse - the connection
between nerve cells - increasing the strength of the synaptic connection and
reinforcing the memory. The study published in Science, is important for
understanding how memory traces are created and the ability to monitor it in
real time will allow a detailed understanding of how memories are formed.
When considering what might be going on in the brain at a molecular
level two essential properties of memory need to be taken into account. First,
because a lot of information needs to be maintained over a long time there has
to be some degree of stability. Second, to allow for learning and adaptation the
system also needs to be highly flexible.
For this reason, research has
focused on synapses which are the main site of exchange and storage in the
brain. They form a vast but also constantly fluctuating network of connections
whose ability to change and adapt, called synaptic plasticity, may be the
fundamental basis of learning and memory.
"But, if this network is
constantly changing, the question is how do memories stay put, how are they
formed? It has been known for some time that an important step in long-term
memory formation is "translation", or the production, of new proteins locally at
the synapse, strengthening the synaptic connection in the reinforcement of a
memory, which until now has never been imaged," says Dr. Wayne Sossin,
neuroscientist at The Neuro and co-investigator in the study. "Using a
translational reporter, a fluorescent protein that can be easily detected and
tracked, we directly visualized the increased local translation, or protein
synthesis, during memory formation. Importantly, this translation was
synapse-specific and it required activation of the post-synaptic cell, showing
that this step required cooperation between the pre and post-synaptic
compartments, the parts of the two neurons that meet at the synapse. Thus highly
regulated local translation occurs at synapses during long-term plasticity and
requires trans-synaptic signals."
Long-term memory and synaptic
plasticity require changes in gene expression and yet can occur in a
synapse-specific manner. This study provides evidence that a mechanism that
mediates this gene expression during neuronal plasticity involves regulated
translation of localized mRNA at stimulated synapses. These findings are
instrumental in establishing the molecular processes involved in long-term
memory formation and provide insight into diseases involving memory impairment.
###
McGill University