Mizunami Makoto, Unoki Sae, Mori Yasuhiro, Hirashima Daisuke, Hatano Ai, Matsumoto Yukihisa
Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Aoba-ku, Sendai, Japan.
BMC Biol. 2009 Aug 4;7:46. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-7-46.
In insect classical conditioning, octopamine (the invertebrate counterpart of noradrenaline) or dopamine has been suggested to mediate reinforcing properties of appetitive or aversive unconditioned stimulus, respectively. However, the roles of octopaminergic and dopaminergic neurons in memory recall have remained unclear.
We studied the roles of octopaminergic and dopaminergic neurons in appetitive and aversive memory recall in olfactory and visual conditioning in crickets. We found that pharmacological blockade of octopamine and dopamine receptors impaired aversive memory recall and appetitive memory recall, respectively, thereby suggesting that activation of octopaminergic and dopaminergic neurons and the resulting release of octopamine and dopamine are needed for appetitive and aversive memory recall, respectively. On the basis of this finding, we propose a new model in which it is assumed that two types of synaptic connections are formed by conditioning and are activated during memory recall, one type being connections from neurons representing conditioned stimulus to neurons inducing conditioned response and the other being connections from neurons representing conditioned stimulus to octopaminergic or dopaminergic neurons representing appetitive or aversive unconditioned stimulus, respectively. The former is called 'stimulus-response connection' and the latter is called 'stimulus-stimulus connection' by theorists studying classical conditioning in higher vertebrates. Our model predicts that pharmacological blockade of octopamine or dopamine receptors during the first stage of second-order conditioning does not impair second-order conditioning, because it impairs the formation of the stimulus-response connection but not the stimulus-stimulus connection. The results of our study with a cross-modal second-order conditioning were in full accordance with this prediction.
We suggest that insect classical conditioning involves the formation of two kinds of memory traces, which match to stimulus-stimulus connection and stimulus-response connection. This is the first study to suggest that classical conditioning in insects involves, as does classical conditioning in higher vertebrates, the formation of stimulus-stimulus connection and its activation for memory recall, which are often called cognitive processes.
在昆虫经典条件反射中,有人提出章鱼胺(去甲肾上腺素在无脊椎动物中的对应物)或多巴胺分别介导了食欲性或厌恶性无条件刺激的强化特性。然而,章鱼胺能和多巴胺能神经元在记忆回忆中的作用仍不清楚。
我们研究了章鱼胺能和多巴胺能神经元在蟋蟀嗅觉和视觉条件反射的食欲性和厌恶性记忆回忆中的作用。我们发现,对章鱼胺和多巴胺受体的药理学阻断分别损害了厌恶性记忆回忆和食欲性记忆回忆,从而表明章鱼胺能和多巴胺能神经元的激活以及由此导致的章鱼胺和多巴胺的释放分别是食欲性和厌恶性记忆回忆所必需的。基于这一发现,我们提出了一个新模型,假设通过条件反射形成了两种类型的突触连接,并在记忆回忆期间被激活,一种类型是从代表条件刺激的神经元到诱导条件反应的神经元的连接,另一种类型是从代表条件刺激的神经元分别到代表食欲性或厌恶性无条件刺激的章鱼胺能或多巴胺能神经元的连接。研究高等脊椎动物经典条件反射的理论家将前者称为“刺激 - 反应连接”,后者称为“刺激 - 刺激连接 ”。我们的模型预测,在二阶条件反射的第一阶段对章鱼胺或多巴胺受体进行药理学阻断不会损害二阶条件反射,因为它损害了刺激 - 反应连接的形成,但没有损害刺激 - 刺激连接的形成。我们的跨模态二阶条件反射研究结果完全符合这一预测。
我们认为昆虫经典条件反射涉及两种记忆痕迹的形成,它们分别与刺激 - 刺激连接和刺激 - 反应连接相匹配。这是第一项表明昆虫经典条件反射与高等脊椎动物的经典条件反射一样,涉及刺激 - 刺激连接的形成及其在记忆回忆中的激活,而这些通常被称为认知过程的研究。