Department of Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, 20246 Hamburg, Germany, and
Department of Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, 20246 Hamburg, Germany, and.
J Neurosci. 2019 Oct 2;39(40):7920-7933. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0495-19.2019. Epub 2019 Aug 12.
The involvement of fronto-striatal circuits in item and associative memory retrieval as well as in the stabilization of memories by retrieval practice suggests that both retrieval and re-encoding of stored memories might rely on dopaminergic mechanisms in humans. We tested these hypotheses in a placebo-controlled pharmacological fMRI study using 2 mg of the D2 antagonist haloperidol administered acutely before a cued associative recall task of previously encoded picture-word pairs in 53 healthy humans of both sexes. The cued associative recall was moreover repeated 3 d later outside the scanner without pharmacological intervention. Dopaminergic modulation significantly improved associative recall performance and recognition accuracy of verbal items. Moreover, we observed a significant dopamine effect on re-encoding in terms of increased specificity of associative memories from the first to the second cued associative recall. Better association memory under haloperidol was linked with higher activity in the left lateral prefrontal cortex and right parietal cortex, suggesting that dopamine facilitates associative retrieval through increased recruitment of frontoparietal monitoring processes. In contrast, improved recognition of verbal items under haloperidol was reflected by enhanced novelty detection in the hippocampus and increased activity in saliency networks. Together, these results show distinct but concomitant positive effects of dopamine on associative recall and item recognition and suggest that the specificity of associative recall through re-encoding mechanisms is likewise augmented by dopamine. Although the neurotransmitter dopamine has been linked with learning and memory for a long time, dopaminergic effects on item recognition in humans were demonstrated only recently. The involvement of fronto-striatal monitoring processes in association retrieval suggests that associative memory might be particularly affected by dopamine. Moreover, fronto-striatal dopaminergic signals have been hypothesized to determine the updating and re-encoding of previously retrieved memories. We here demonstrate clear facilitative effects of dopamine on associative recall and item recognition mediated by prefrontal and hippocampal mechanisms respectively. Additionally, effects on re-encoding were reflected by increased specificity of associative memories. These results augment our understanding of dopaminergic processes in episodic memory retrieval and offer new perspectives on memory impairments in dopamine-related disorders and their treatment.
额-纹状体回路参与项目和联想记忆检索,以及通过检索实践稳定记忆,这表明检索和重新编码存储的记忆可能依赖于人类的多巴胺机制。我们在一项安慰剂对照的药物 fMRI 研究中测试了这些假设,该研究使用 2 毫克的 D2 拮抗剂氟哌啶醇,在 53 名健康男女被试进行先前编码的图片-单词对的线索联想回忆任务之前,急性给药。此外,在没有药物干预的情况下,在扫描仪外 3 天后重复进行线索联想回忆。多巴胺能调节显著改善了联想回忆表现和言语项目的识别准确性。此外,我们观察到多巴胺对重新编码有显著影响,表现在从第一次到第二次线索联想回忆,联想记忆的特异性增加。氟哌啶醇下更好的联想记忆与左侧外侧前额叶皮层和右侧顶叶皮层的更高活性相关,表明多巴胺通过增加额顶叶监测过程的招募来促进联想检索。相比之下,氟哌啶醇下言语项目识别的提高反映在海马体中新奇性检测的增强和显著性网络活动的增加。总之,这些结果显示多巴胺对联想回忆和项目识别有明显但同时的积极影响,并表明通过重新编码机制的联想回忆特异性也会增强。尽管神经递质多巴胺与学习和记忆有关很长时间,但人类对项目识别的多巴胺作用直到最近才被证明。额-纹状体监测过程在联想检索中的参与表明,联想记忆可能特别受到多巴胺的影响。此外,额-纹状体多巴胺信号被假设可以决定先前检索到的记忆的更新和重新编码。我们在这里证明,多巴胺通过分别与前额叶和海马体机制相关的联想回忆和项目识别,对联想回忆和项目识别具有明确的促进作用。此外,重新编码的影响反映在联想记忆特异性的增加。这些结果增加了我们对情景记忆检索中多巴胺过程的理解,并为多巴胺相关疾病的记忆障碍及其治疗提供了新的视角。