Price Kaiden, Obrietan Karl
Department of Neuroscience, Ohio State University, 333 W 10(th) Ave, Columbus, OH, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, Ohio State University, 333 W 10(th) Ave, Columbus, OH, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2018 Oct 1;194:387-393. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.06.035. Epub 2018 Jun 23.
While a rich literature has documented that the efficiency of learning and memory varies across circadian time, a close survey of that literature reveals extensive heterogeneity in the time of day (TOD) when peak cognitive performance occurs. Moreover, most previous experiments in rodents have not focused on the question of discriminating which memory processes (e.g., working memory, memory acquisition, or retrieval) are modulated by the TOD. Here, we use assays of contextual fear conditioning and spontaneous alternation in WT (C57Bl/6 J) mice to survey circadian modulation of hippocampal-dependent memory at multiple timescales - including working memory (seconds to a few minutes), intermediate-term memory (a delay of thirty minutes), and acquisition and retrieval of long-term memory (a delay of two days). Further, in order to test the relative contributions of circadian timing mechanisms to the modulation of memory, a parallel set of studies were performed in mice lacking clock timing mechanisms. These transgenic mice lacked the essential circadian gene Bmal1, either globally (Bmal1 null) or locally (floxed Bmal1 mice, which lack Bmal1 in excitatory forebrain neurons, e.g. cortical and hippocampal neurons). Here, we show that in WT mice, retrieval (but not working memory, intermediate-term memory, or acquisition of long-term memory) is modulated by TOD. However, transgenic mouse models lacking Bmal1 - both globally, and only in forebrain excitatory neurons - show deficits regardless of the memory process tested (and lack circadian modulation of retrieval). These results provide new clarity regarding the impact of the TOD on hippocampal-dependent memory and support the key role of hippocampal and cortical circadian oscillations in circadian gating of cognition.
虽然丰富的文献记载了学习和记忆效率在昼夜节律时间上存在差异,但对这些文献的仔细研究发现,认知表现峰值出现的一天中的时间(TOD)存在广泛的异质性。此外,以前在啮齿动物中进行的大多数实验都没有关注区分哪些记忆过程(例如工作记忆、记忆获取或检索)受TOD调节的问题。在这里,我们使用野生型(C57Bl/6 J)小鼠的情境恐惧条件反射和自发交替试验,在多个时间尺度上研究海马依赖性记忆的昼夜节律调节——包括工作记忆(几秒到几分钟)、中期记忆(30分钟的延迟)以及长期记忆的获取和检索(两天的延迟)。此外,为了测试昼夜节律计时机制对记忆调节的相对贡献,我们在缺乏时钟计时机制的小鼠中进行了一组平行研究。这些转基因小鼠要么全局缺乏基本的昼夜节律基因Bmal1(Bmal1基因敲除小鼠),要么局部缺乏(floxed Bmal1小鼠,其在兴奋性前脑神经元,如皮层和海马神经元中缺乏Bmal1)。在这里,我们表明,在野生型小鼠中,检索(而非工作记忆、中期记忆或长期记忆的获取)受TOD调节。然而,无论是全局缺乏Bmal1,还是仅在前脑兴奋性神经元中缺乏Bmal1的转基因小鼠模型,无论测试何种记忆过程都表现出缺陷(并且缺乏检索的昼夜节律调节)。这些结果为TOD对海马依赖性记忆的影响提供了新的清晰认识,并支持海马和皮层昼夜节律振荡在认知的昼夜节律门控中的关键作用。