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Date: Sep 02nd

Time: 09:30 am

Place : 2nd Floor Conference Room, Gonda building.

Title : ""Prior experience modulates a natural threshold for memory formation ""

Speaker: Kiriana Cowansage

Summary: Our current understanding of the molecular requirements for long–term memory come largely from studies that use experimental manipulations to alter average behavior. Few studies, on the other hand, have investigated the contribution of plasticity-related proteins, like CREB, to existing behavioral differences in memory strength that emerge naturally from genetically diverse populations. In this talk I will begin by presenting work from the labs of Joe LeDoux and Eric Klann (in collaboration with Sheena Josselyn) to identify rats from a normally distributed group that fail to form typical cued fear associations and express reduced baseline levels of phospho-CREB. Memory in this subset of rats was selectively improved by both pre-training exposure to contextual novelty and by virally mediated enhancement of amygdala CREB activity. These results provide some conceptual basis for current plans to investigate the cellular dynamics of weak versus strong associative memory traces in the lab of Mark Mayford, using a novel genetically encoded fluorescent timer expressed in mice under the control of neural activity.



Relevant Information:

Subach et al (2009) Nat. Chem Biol