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posted by janrinok on Friday November 11 2016, @05:29AM   Printer-friendly
from the now-I-remember dept.

While the romantic poets' idea of memories being akin to spirits may have poetic merit, the scientists' perspective is that memories are concrete, physical entities that can be visualized within various regions of the brain.

Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have now for the first time identified a sub-region in the brain that works to form a particular kind of memory: fear-associated with a specific environmental cue or "contextual fear memory."
...
In particular, the study showed new protein synthesis in a specific sub-region of the prefrontal cortex known in rodents as the prelimbic. In humans, this area corresponds to the anterior cortex, which has been linked to processing emotional responses. Initially, Puthanveettil and his colleagues ignored the medial prefrontal cortex because no one believed that it had anything to do with early encoding of long term memories.

However, when they closely examined the effects on the brain of conditioning rodents with a mild foot shock, the scientists found several messenger RNAs recruited to polyribosomes in the medial prefrontal cortex -- a clear indication of new protein synthesis there.

Puthanveettil and his colleagues also discovered that if they inhibited new protein synthesis in the prelimbic region right after fear conditioning took place, those memories did not form. But if the researchers waited just a few hours, inhibiting protein synthesis in prelimbic cortex had no impact and the memories took hold. There is temporal and spatial regulation of new protein synthesis in the medial prefrontal cortex.

An abstract of the paper "Encoding of Contextual fear Memory Requires de novo Proteins in the Prelimbic Cortex" is available.

When the scientists inhibited new protein synthesis in the prelimbic region after fear conditioning, the rats formed no new memories. The finding could help avoid PTSD.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2) by HiThere on Friday November 11 2016, @08:03PM

    by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Friday November 11 2016, @08:03PM (#425802) Journal

    This seems to imply that protein synthesis is necessary for memory formation, and that fear memory is encoded by proteins synthesized in one particular area, which may imply that other emotional memories are also driven by protein synthesis, but not necessarily from the same area. My first guess would be NOT from the same area, as memory seems a more primitive function than fine discrimination between types of memory. (Avoid approach is pretty basic...but people tend to be fascinated by fire rather than avoiding it. which would seem to be an elaboration on top of an existing emotional reaction.)

    An alternative is that all (or most) emotions are driven by protein synthesis in the same area, but there are different proteins...or possibly the distribution is different.

    This seems an important finding, not in and of itself, but because it opens so many more areas of investigation.

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