Lynch M A
Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Department of Physiology, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.
Physiol Rev. 2004 Jan;84(1):87-136. doi: 10.1152/physrev.00014.2003.
One of the most significant challenges in neuroscience is to identify the cellular and molecular processes that underlie learning and memory formation. The past decade has seen remarkable progress in understanding changes that accompany certain forms of acquisition and recall, particularly those forms which require activation of afferent pathways in the hippocampus. This progress can be attributed to a number of factors including well-characterized animal models, well-defined probes for analysis of cell signaling events and changes in gene transcription, and technology which has allowed gene knockout and overexpression in cells and animals. Of the several animal models used in identifying the changes which accompany plasticity in synaptic connections, long-term potentiation (LTP) has received most attention, and although it is not yet clear whether the changes that underlie maintenance of LTP also underlie memory consolidation, significant advances have been made in understanding cell signaling events that contribute to this form of synaptic plasticity. In this review, emphasis is focused on analysis of changes that occur after learning, especially spatial learning, and LTP and the value of assessing these changes in parallel is discussed. The effect of different stressors on spatial learning/memory and LTP is emphasized, and the review concludes with a brief analysis of the contribution of studies, in which transgenic animals were used, to the literature on memory/learning and LTP.
神经科学领域最重大的挑战之一是确定学习和记忆形成背后的细胞和分子过程。在过去十年中,我们对伴随某些形式的获取和回忆所发生的变化有了显著进展,特别是那些需要激活海马体传入通路的形式。这一进展可归因于多种因素,包括特征明确的动物模型、用于分析细胞信号事件和基因转录变化的明确探针,以及能够在细胞和动物中实现基因敲除和过表达的技术。在用于识别伴随突触连接可塑性变化的几种动物模型中,长期增强作用(LTP)受到了最多关注,尽管目前尚不清楚维持LTP的变化是否也构成记忆巩固的基础,但在理解促成这种突触可塑性形式的细胞信号事件方面已经取得了重大进展。在这篇综述中,重点聚焦于对学习后发生的变化的分析,尤其是空间学习,以及LTP,并讨论了并行评估这些变化的价值。强调了不同应激源对空间学习/记忆和LTP的影响,综述最后简要分析了使用转基因动物的研究对记忆/学习和LTP文献的贡献。