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Small Systems of Neurons

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Small Systems of Neurons Studies of the snail Aplysia show that small systems of neurons are capable of forms of memory and learning – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Small Systems of Neurons


1
Small Systems of Neurons
  • Studies of the snail Aplysia show that small
    systems of neurons are capable of forms of memory
    and learning

2
Eric Kandel
  • Howard Hugh Medical Institute
  • Columbia University
  • Undergradute BA in history and literature from
    Harvard College
  • MD at the New York University School of Medicine

3
Motivation
  • Humans in a large part are what we have learned
    and remembered.
  • We are unique in our abilities to acquire new
    ideas from experience and to retain those ideas
    in memory.
  • What changes occur in the brain when we learn and
    how is this information retained in the brain?

4
Definitions
  • Learning is the ability to modify behavior in
    response to experiences.
  • Memory is the ability to store that modification
    over a period of time.

5
Commonality
  • Arent humans unique in their abilities? Arent
    our abilities to learn, etc qualitatively
    different from other organisms?
  • Ethologists (Lorenz, Tinbergen, and Frisch)
    demonstrated that there are commonalities in
    animal behavior.
  • Thus, such commonality suggests that their may be
    some underlying common neuronal mechanisms
    (example cellular and molecular similarities
    between our neurons and synapses).

6
Approach
  • In the 1950s, Eric Kandel became interested in
    opening up what psychoanalysts had been treating
    as a black box. He wanted to study the
    behaviors of memory and learning using the modern
    empirical approaches of biology.
  • Knowing it was unlikely to make progress studying
    the complex pattern of interconnections in the
    human or vertebrate brain, he thought that he
    could apply a reductionist methodology to the
    problem of memory and learning.
  • He chose to work with the marine snail, Aplysia,
    in the vein of working with model organisms like
    Drosophila, yeast, bacteria, and bacteriophages.

7
The Marine Sea Slug Aplysia
  • Aplysia made a good candidate for study for a
    number of reasons.
  • Small Numbers of Neurons (20,000)
  • 10 Ganglia collections (2000 cells each)
  • Large, Visible Uniquely Pigmented Neurons

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Steps in Study of Memory
  1. Define a simple behavior that can be modified by
    learning and that gives rise to memory storage.
  2. Identify the cells that compose the neural
    circuit of the behavior.
  3. Locate critical neurons and interconnections that
    had been modified by the behavior.
  4. Analyze the cellular and molecular changes
    occurring at those neurons and interconnections.

10
The Simple BehaviorAplysias Defense Reflex
  • When a weak or moderate stimulus is applied to
    the siphon, the gill contracts and withdraws into
    the mantle cavity.
  • There are two forms of learning associated with
    this reflex habituation and sensitization

11
Habituation
  • Habituation is a decrease in the strength of a
    behavioral response that occurs when an initially
    novel stimulus is presented repeatedly.
  • This is probably the most wide-spread of all
    forms of learning.
  • It allows animals to ignore meaningless stimuli
    so that they are more likely to attend to
    meaningful stimuli.

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13
Habituation Memory
  • Studies of habituation have provided
    opportunities for understanding short and
    long-term memory.
  • After 1 training session of 10 to 15 stimuli,
    snails habituate the stimuli but the normal
    reflex begins to return within an hour and fully
    returns within a day.
  • After 4 training session of 10 stimuli each,
    snails habituate the stimuli and this state lasts
    for weeks.

14
Sensitization
  • Sensitization is more complex than habituation in
    that the animal has to learn to respond strongly
    to an otherwise neutral stimulus.
  • It is the prolonged enhancement of an animals
    preexisting response to a stimulus as a result of
    the presentation of a second noxious stimulus.

15
Sensitization Experiment
  • In this case, Aplysia is given a shock to the
    tail, and then the gill reflex is induced.
  • Aplysia respond to the previously innocuous
    habituated stimuli with a strong gill withdrawal
    reflex

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17
Distinct Memory Phases
  • A single shock gives rise to a memory lasting
    only minutes no protein synthesis required.
  • Four or five spaced shocks gives rise to a memory
    lasting many days requiring protein synthesis.

18
Identifying the Cellular CircuitAplysias
Abdominal Ganglion
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The Cellular Circuit
  • The circuit contains 24 mechanoreceptor sensory
    neurons that innervate the siphon skin.
  • These sensory neurons make direct monosynaptic
    connections with 6 gill motor cells.
  • The sensory neurons also made indirect connection
    to the gill motor cells through interneurons
    (excitatory and inhibitory).
  • This circuit was found to be invariant among
    individuals studied.

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Neuronal Modifications
  • In 1894, Santiago Ramon y Cajal suggested that
    memory is stored in the growth of new
    connections.
  • Kandels research showed that although the
    connections are invariant, their specific
    strength is not.
  • Homosynaptic changes occur in a synapse because
    of activity in that synapse, while heterosynaptic
    changes occur in a synapse due to activity in an
    adjacent modulatory interneuron.

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25
Cellular Molecular ChangesShort Term Memory
(Modular Circuits)
  • Modulatory interneurons transmit serotonin which
    acts on the sensory neuron.
  • Serotonergic receptors cause increases in cyclic
    AMP (cAMP) and the activation of the
    cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA).
  • PKA phosphorylates K and Ca channel proteins,
    causing a reduction and influx of their
    associated ions, respectively.
  • Ionic concentrations cause vesicles containing
    neurotransmitters to fuse with the pre-synaptic
    membrane and release their contents.
  • Thus, the short term sensitization is caused by
    increases in the amount of neurotransmitter.

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Short Term Memory Overview
  • Short-term memory is a modulation of the strength
    of an existing synapse, through temporary
    changes in the amount of neurotransmitter
    released. This does not require new protein
    synthesis.

28
Cellular Molecular ChangesLong Term Memory
  • Increased levels of serotonin activates PKA and
    mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), both of
    which enter the nucleus.
  • These kinases activate the transcription factor
    CREB-1 (cAMP Response Element Binding protein-1)
    which promotes expression of genes leading to the
    growth of new synaptic connections. Thus,
    supporting Cajals hypothesis.
  • One gene produces Ubiquitin Hydrolase which
    causes the persistent activation of PKA.

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30
Long Term Memory Overview
  • Long-term memory is a modulation of the strength
    of an existing synapse, through growth in the
    number of synapses. This requires new protein
    synthesis.

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32
  • http//www.pitt.edu/super1/lecture/lec14361/001.h
    tm
  • Eric Kandel, Nobel Lecture, The Molecular Biology
    of Memory Storage A Dialog Between Genes and
    Synapses, December 8, 2000.
  • Eric Kandel (1979) Small Systems of Neurons,
    Scientific American
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