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Spine growth in the anterior cingulate cortex is necessary for the consolidation of contextual fear memory
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- National Academy of Sciences, 2011.
-
Abstract
- Remodeling of cortical connectivity is thought to allow initially hippocampus-dependent memories to be expressed independently of the hippocampus at remote time points. Consistent with this, consolidation of a contextual fear memory is associated with dendritic spine growth in neurons of the anterior cingulate cortex (aCC). To directly test whether such cortical structural remodeling is necessary for memory consolidation, we disrupted spine growth in the aCC at different times following contextual fear conditioning in mice. We took advantage of previous studies showing that the transcription factor myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2) negatively regulates spinogenesis both in vitro and in vivo. We found that increasing MEF2-dependent transcription in the aCC during a critical posttraining window (but not at later time points) blocked both the consolidation-associated dendritic spine growth and subsequent memory expression. Together, these data strengthen the causal link between cortical structural remodeling and memory consolidation and, further, identify MEF2 as a key regulator of these processes.
- Subjects :
- Mef2
Neurons
Multidisciplinary
Dendritic spine
Consolidation (soil)
Transcription, Genetic
MEF2 Transcription Factors
Dendritic Spines
Regulator
Hippocampus
Biological Sciences
Gyrus Cinguli
Mice
medicine.anatomical_structure
Myogenic Regulatory Factors
Conditioning, Psychological
medicine
Animals
Memory consolidation
Psychology
Transcription factor
Neuroscience
Anterior cingulate cortex
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2e213e383110c7cd2ef61e2478c7f55e