Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e32334. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0032334. Epub 2012 Feb 24.
Cognitive ability varies within species, but whether this variation alters the manner in which memory formation is affected by environmental stress is unclear. The great pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis, is commonly used as model species in studies of learning and memory. The majority of those studies used a single laboratory strain (i.e. the Dutch strain) originating from a wild population in the Netherlands. However, our recent work has identified natural populations that demonstrate significantly enhanced long-term memory (LTM) formation relative to the Dutch strain following operant conditioning of aerial respiratory behaviour. Here we assess how two populations with enhanced memory formation (i.e. 'smart' snails), one from Canada (Trans Canada 1: TC1) and one from the U.K. (Chilton Moor: CM) respond to ecologically relevant stressors. In control conditions the Dutch strain forms memory lasting 1-3 h following a single 0.5 h training session in our standard calcium pond water (80 mg/l [Ca(2+)]), whereas the TC1 and CM populations formed LTM lasting 5+ days following this training regime. Exposure to low environmental calcium pond water (20 mg/l [Ca(2+)]), which blocks LTM in the Dutch strain, reduced LTM retention to 24 h in the TC1 and CM populations. Crowding (20 snails in 100 ml) immediately prior to training blocks LTM in the Dutch strain, and also did so in TC1 and CM populations. Therefore, snails with enhanced cognitive ability respond to these ecologically relevant stressors in a similar manner to the Dutch strain, but are more robust at forming LTM in a low calcium environment. Despite the two populations (CM and TC1) originating from different continents, LTM formation was indistinguishable in both control and stressed conditions. This indicates that the underlying mechanisms controlling cognitive differences among populations may be highly conserved in L. stagnalis.
认知能力在物种内存在差异,但这种差异是否会改变环境压力对记忆形成的影响方式尚不清楚。大型圆田螺(Lymnaea stagnalis)通常被用作学习和记忆研究的模式生物。这些研究中的大多数使用的是单一的实验室品系(即荷兰品系),源自荷兰的一个野生种群。然而,我们最近的工作发现,相对于荷兰品系,经过空中呼吸行为的操作性条件反射后,来自加拿大(Trans Canada 1:TC1)和英国(Chilton Moor:CM)的两个自然种群表现出显著增强的长期记忆(LTM)形成能力。在这里,我们评估了两个具有增强记忆形成能力的种群(即“聪明”蜗牛)对生态相关应激源的反应。在对照条件下,荷兰品系在我们的标准钙池塘水中(80 mg/l [Ca(2+)])进行单次 0.5 小时训练后,形成持续 1-3 小时的记忆,而 TC1 和 CM 种群在这种训练后形成持续 5 天以上的 LTM。暴露于低环境钙池塘水(20 mg/l [Ca(2+)])中会阻止荷兰品系形成 LTM,而 TC1 和 CM 种群中的 LTM 保留时间则缩短至 24 小时。在训练前立即拥挤(100 ml 中有 20 只蜗牛)会阻止荷兰品系形成 LTM,也会阻止 TC1 和 CM 种群形成 LTM。因此,具有增强认知能力的蜗牛对这些生态相关应激源的反应与荷兰品系相似,但在低钙环境中形成 LTM 的能力更强。尽管这两个种群(CM 和 TC1)起源于不同的大陆,但在对照和应激条件下,LTM 的形成没有区别。这表明,控制种群间认知差异的潜在机制在圆田螺中可能高度保守。