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Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory

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The sea slug Aplysis californica, is used for studies in neurobiology ... squirted on a portion of the slug (the siphon) causes withdrawal of the siphon & the gill ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory


1
Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory
2
Procedural Learning
  • Learning a motor response (procedure) in relation
    to a sensory input
  • Two types
  • Nonassociative learning
  • Associative learning

3
Contrast to Declarative Memory
  • Declarative Memory
  • Easily formed and easily forgotten
  • Created by small modifications of synapses
  • Widely distributed in the brain
  • Difficult to study
  • Procedural Memory
  • Is robust (not easily lost)
  • Can be formed along simple reflex pathways
  • Easier to study

4
Nonassociative Learning
  • A change in behavior over time in response to a
    single type of stimulus
  • Two types
  • Habituation
  • Learning to ignore a stimulus that lacks meaning
  • The response to a repeated stimulus decreases
  • Sensitization
  • A strong sensory stimulus can intensify your
    response to all stimuli
  • The response to a given stimulus increases

5
Associative Learning
  • Formation of associations between two events
  • Two Types
  • Classical conditioning
  • associating an effective, response-evoking
    stimulus with a second, normally ineffective
    stimulus
  • Pavlovs dogs
  • Instrumental conditioning
  • associating a motor action with a stimulus
  • pressing a lever produces a food pellet

6
Invertebrate Systems
  • Provide models to study learning behavior
  • Small nervous systems
  • perhaps 1000 neurons, 107 fewer than humans
  • Large neurons
  • easy to study electro-physiologically
  • Identifiable neurons
  • can be identified from animal to animal
  • Identifiable circuits
  • identifiable neurons make the same connections
    with one another from animal to animal
  • Simple genetics
  • small genomes and short life cycles

7
Aplysia as a Model for Learning
  • The sea slug Aplysis californica, is used for
    studies in neurobiology
  • Exhibits simple forms of learning, including
    habituation, sensitization, and classical
    conditioning

8
Aplysia Nonassociative Learning
  • Gill withdrawal reflex
  • A jet of water squirted on a portion of the slug
    (the siphon) causes withdrawal of the siphon
    the gill
  • Habituation
  • After repeated trials, effect is diminished

9
What Causes Habituation?
  • Motor neuron, L7, receives direct sensory input
    from the siphon innervates muscles used for
    gill withdrawal
  • Showed that habituation occurs at the synapse
    between sensory motor neuron
  • Progressive decrease in the size of excitatory
    postsynaptic potentials (EPSP's)
  • Mechanism
  • less calcium enters presynaptic terminal
  • so fewer transmitter molecules are released
  • Therfore presynaptic modification

10
Neurons in Habituation
11
Gill Withdrawal Reflex Sensitization
  • Shock to head associated with stimulation of
    siphon increases gill withdrawal reflex
    sensitization
  • How does this work?
  • Neuron from head (L29) synapses on the axon
    terminal of the sensory neuron
  • Releases serotonin
  • Causes molecular cascade that sensitizes sensory
    axon terminal

12
Neurons in Sensitization
13
Sensitization Cascade
  • Serotonin receptor on the sensory axon terminal
    is a G-protein coupled receptor
  • Binding activates adenylyl cyclase enzyme
  • Which produces cyclic AMP (2nd messenger)
  • Which activates protein kinase A (PKA)
  • Which phosphorylates a protein forming the
    potassium channel
  • Which causes it to close
  • Prolonging the presynaptic action potential
  • So more calcium enters
  • Thus more neurotransmitters are released

14
Associative Learning in Aplysia
  • Classical conditioning
  • Unconditioned stimulus shock to tail
  • Conditioned stimulus siphon stimulation
  • If the 2 stimuli were paired, subsequent gill
    withdrawal response to siphon stimulation alone
    was greater
  • Uses same neuron as sensitization, through an
    interneuron

15
Molecular Mechanism
  • CS response (gill withdrawal) results from influx
    of calcium ions
  • US (tail shock) causes G-protein coupled
    activation of adenylyl cyclase
  • Elevated Ca causes adenylyl cyclase to make
    more cAMP
  • This increases total cascade, resulting in more
    neurotransmitter release
  • Learning occurs when presynaptic Ca release
    coincides with G-protein activation of adenylyl
    cyclase producing abundant cAMP
  • Memory occurs when K channels are phosporylated
    increasing transmittere release

16
Molecular Changes Memory
  • One synapse affects another synapse.
  • Short term memory can be produced when a weak
    stimulus causes phosphorylation of ion channels,
    leading to release of an increased amount of
    transmitter.
  • Long term memory requires a stronger and more
    long-lasting stimulus causing increased cAMP,
    which causes further activation of protein
    kinases.

17
Visualizing Memory Changes
  • Short-term memory
  • thin arrows in the left lower part of the figure
  • Long-term memory
  • bold arrows

18
Lessons Learned
  • Learning and memory can result from modification
    of synaptic transmission
  • Synaptic modifications can be triggered by
    conversion of neural activity to 2nd messengers
  • Memories can result from alterations in existing
    synaptic proteins

19
Vertebrate Models of Learning
  • The cerebellum, because of its role in motor
    control, is a model system to study synaptic
    basis of learning in higher organisms
  • Site of motor learning
  • Place where corrections of movement are made

20
Anatomy of the Cerebellar Cortex
  • 2 layers of neuronal cell bodies
  • Purkinje cell layer
  • Granule cell layer
  • Purkinje cells
  • modify the output of the cerebellum
  • Use GABA so influence is inhibitory
  • Fibers
  • Climbing fibers
  • innervate Purkinje cell from inferior olive
  • Mossy fibers
  • innervate granule cells from pons 11
  • Parallel fibers from granule cells
  • innervate Purkinje cell 100,0001

21
Layers of Cerebellar Cortex
22
Long Term Depression (LTD)
  • Occurs when climbing fibers and parallel fibers
    are active together
  • Molecular mechanism
  • Climbing fiber activation causes surge of Ca
    into Purkinje cell
  • Glutamate from parallel fiber activates AMPA
    receptor (glutamate receptor that mediates
    excitatory transmission)
  • Na increases
  • But this process employs a second receptor . . .

23
Mechanism of LTD (cont.)
  • There is a second glutamate receptor postsynaptic
    to the parallel fibers metabotropic glutamate
    receptor
  • G-protein-coupled to enzyme phospholipase C.
    (PLC)
  • Which catalyzes formation of a second messenger,
    diacylglycerol (DAG)
  • Which activates protein kinase C (PKC)
  • Analogous to what happens in classical
    conditioning in Aplysia

24
Molecular Changes in Learning Memory
  • Learning occurs when the three things happen
    together
  • Elevated Ca due to climbing fiber activation
  • Elevated Na due to AMPA receptor activation
  • Activated PKC due to metabotropic receptor
    activation
  • Memory results from changes in AMPA receptor due
    to PKC - decrease AMPA openings

25
Declarative Memory the Hippocampus
  • Declarative memory relies on the neocortex and
    structures in the medial temporal lobe, including
    the hippocampus
  • Long-term potentiation (LTP)
  • Brief high-frequency electrical stimulation of a
    pathway to the hippocampus produces long lasting
    increase in strength of stimulated synapses
  • LTD also found in the hippocampus
  • LTP LDP may be the basis of how declarative
    memories form in the brain

26
Anatomy of the Hippocampus
  • Two thin sheets of neurons folded on each other
  • Dentate gyrus
  • Ammons horn
  • Has 4 divisions
  • CA3 CA1 are important here

27
Connections in the Hippocampus
  • Entorhinal cortex connects to the hippocampus via
    axons called the perforant path
  • Mossy fibers from the dentate gyrus synapses on
    CA3
  • CA3 cells synapse via Schaffer collateral on
    cells in CA1 region
  • Both CA3 and CA1 cells have output fibers to the
    fornix

28
Hippocampus Structure
29
Long Term Potentiation (LTP)
  • LTP occurs in CA1 when multiple synapses are
    active at the same time that the CA1 cell is
    depolarized
  • Recall that glutamate receptors are responsible
    for excitatory transmission in the hippocampus

30
Mechanism of LTP
  • Glutamate released from synapse
  • Na ions pass through the AMPA receptor causing
    EPSPs
  • CA1 neurons also have post synaptic
    N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors
  • These conduct Ca ions when cell is depolarized
  • Thus Ca entering the NMDA receptor indicates
    that presynaptic postsynaptic elements are
    active at the same time

31
Induction of LTP
  • Rise in postsynaptic Ca linked to LTP
  • LTP induction is prevented if NMDA receptors are
    inhibited
  • Rise in Ca activates 2 protein kinases
  • Protein kinase C
  • Clacium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II
    (CaMKII)
  • Inhibition of either of these blocks long term
    potentiation
  • Following LTP a single axon may form multiple new
    synapses on a single postsynaptic neuron

32
Long Term Depression (LTD)
  • LTD occurs in CA1 when it is only weakly
    depolarized by other inputs
  • Inward calcium levels are lower, activating a
    different enzymatic response
  • Thus, LTP and LTD are two responses of the same
    system

33
LTD, LTP, Memory
  • LTP LDP are mechanisms of synaptic plasticity
  • They may contribute to the formation of
    declarative memory
  • Recordings from inferotemporal cortex slices from
    humans shows the same kind of interplay of LTP
    and LTD
  • Rats with damage to the hippocampus show reduced
    learning in Morris water maze
  • Injecting an NMDA-blocker into rats produces the
    same reduction of learning

34
Molecular Basis of Long-term Memory
  • Molecular mechanisms all involve the
    phosphorylation of something
  • Phosphorylation is not permanent
  • phosphate groups get removed, erasing memory
  • Proteins themselves are not permanent, but get
    replaced

35
Persistently Active Protein Kinases
  • Maybe memory is a turned on protein kinase
  • For LTP in CA1 in the hippocampus, an enzyme
    activating CaMKII may autophosphorylate and then
    just stay on
  • Molecular switch hypothesis - autophosphorylating
    kinase could store information at the synapse

36
Protein Synthesis Memory Consolidation
  • Inhibitors of protein synthesis block
    consolidation in experimental animals, both
    mammals and Aplysia
  • Suggests some new protein must arrive to make
    short-term changes permanent

37
CREB Memory
  • (CREB)   cAMP response element binding protein
  • CREB regulates gene expression on DNA
  • CREB regulated gene expression is essential for
    consolidation in the fruit fly
  • Similar results have been shown in Aplysia
  • CREB may be able to regulate the strength of a
    memory

38
Structural Plasticity Memory
  • In Aplysia long-term learning involves the
    addition of synapses
  • forgetting is the deletion of synapses
  • Some indication that such changes occur in
    mammals, despite being past the critical period
    for developmental plasticity
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