Vaillend C, Rampon C, Davis S, Laroche S
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie de I'Apprentissage, de la Mémoire et de la Communication, CNRS UMR 8620, University of Paris-Sud, Orsay, France.
Curr Mol Med. 2002 Nov;2(7):613-28. doi: 10.2174/1566524023361952.
There has been nearly a century of interest in the idea that information is stored in the brain as changes in the efficacy of synaptic connections between neurons that are activated during learning. The discovery and detailed report of the phenomenon generally known as long-term potentiation opened a new chapter in the study of synaptic plasticity in the vertebrate brain, and this form of synaptic plasticity has now become the dominant model in the search for the cellular and molecular bases of learning and memory. Accumulating evidence suggests that the rapid activation of the genetic machinery is a key mechanism underlying the enduring modification of neural networks required for the laying down of memory. Here we briefly review these mechanisms and illustrate with a few examples of animal models of neurological disorders how new knowledge about these mechanisms can provide valuable insights into identifying the mechanisms that go awry when memory is deficient, and how, in turn, characterisation of the dysfunctional mechanisms offers prospects to design and evaluate molecular and biobehavioural strategies for therapeutic prevention and rescue.
近一个世纪以来,人们一直对这样一种观点感兴趣:信息作为学习过程中被激活的神经元之间突触连接效能的变化存储在大脑中。被称为长时程增强的这一现象的发现及详细报道,为脊椎动物大脑突触可塑性的研究开启了新篇章,并且这种突触可塑性形式现已成为探寻学习和记忆的细胞及分子基础的主导模型。越来越多的证据表明,基因机制的快速激活是记忆形成所需神经网络持久修饰的关键机制。在此,我们简要回顾这些机制,并通过一些神经疾病动物模型的例子来说明,关于这些机制的新知识如何能为识别记忆缺陷时出错的机制提供有价值的见解,以及反过来,功能失调机制的特征描述如何为设计和评估治疗性预防及挽救的分子和生物行为策略提供前景。