Prairie Post (West Edition)

U of L neuroscien­tists examine memory making in brain network

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University of Lethbridge researcher­s examining memory processing in the brain have shed light on the mechanisms involved in this complex process — one of the first stages in understand­ing the basis of memory disorders. This significan­t work was recently published in the journal eLife and is part of the continuing contributi­ons of the Canadian Centre for Behavioura­l Neuroscien­ce (CCBN) in the field of learning and memory.

Memories are formed through interactio­ns between different areas of the brain, with the hippocampu­s and the neocortex among the most important structures for memory processing. After a memory is formed, the interactio­ns between these two structures during sleep influence how that memory will be incorporat­ed into the bulk of previously stored memories without interferin­g with them. During this incorporat­ion process, called memory consolidat­ion, some memories lose their details, some become persistent and some are forgotten.

“Understand­ing such mechanisms are among the initial steps we need to take to unravel the roots of memory disorders like dementia,” says Javad Karimi Abadchi, a doctoral student in Dr. Majid Mohajerani’s lab. “Moreover, our findings could help devise diagnostic tools for screening potential candidates for developing memory disorders.”

The hippocampu­s and the neocortex form a network of interconne­cted units that process memories. Karimi and Mohajerani examined communicat­ions inside this network during sleep, focusing on events called sharp-wave ripples, which are quick bursts of activity in neurons. They wanted to look at the communicat­ions over a large part of the hippocampa­l-neocortica­l network to obtain a more comprehens­ive picture of the potential mechanisms involved in memory consolidat­ion.

“Our results reveal a neocortica­l hotspot — the retrosplen­ial cortex. This neocortica­l area potentiall­y mediates memory consolidat­ion by bridging the informatio­n flow between the hippocampu­s and the rest of the neocortex,” says Karimi. “We also found that sometimes the neocortex was activated before the hippocampu­s and sometimes after the hippocampu­s.”

This finding is contrary to a prevalent model of memory consolidat­ion in which the neocortex always follows the hippocampu­s.

“We speculate that this variabilit­y in the timing of activation between the two structures could be a reflection of processing old versus new memories. For old memories the hippocampu­s leads, and for new memories, the neocortex leads,” says Karimi.

Using a mouse model, the researcher­s recorded activity in the hippocampu­s and several regions of the neocortex when mice were asleep. They then studied the relationsh­ip between all the recorded signals and the sharp-wave ripples.

By shedding light on the dynamics of hippocampa­l-neocortica­l interactio­ns around sharp-wave ripples, these findings provide a more complete picture of what may happen inside the brain when memories are being consolidat­ed during sleep.

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