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Dharmendra S. Modha

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Rapid Erasure of Long-Term Memory Associations in the Cortex by an Inhibitor of PKM zeta

August 20, 2007 By dmodha

Science published an interseting study (Science 17 August 2007:
Vol. 317. no. 5840, pp. 951 – 953) by Reut Shema, Todd Charlton Sacktor, and Yadin Dudai.

Abstract:

Little is known about the neuronal mechanisms that subserve long-term memory persistence in the brain. The components of the remodeled synaptic machinery, and how they sustain the new synaptic or cellwide configuration over time, are yet to be elucidated. In the rat cortex, long-term associative memories vanished rapidly after local application of an inhibitor of the protein kinase C isoform, protein kinase M zeta (PKM zeta). The effect was observed for at least several weeks after encoding and may be irreversible. In the neocortex, which is assumed to be the repository of multiple types of long-term memory, persistence of memory is thus dependent on ongoing activity of a protein kinase long after that memory is considered to have consolidated into a long-term stable form.

Filed Under: Brain-inspired Computing

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