Memory Loss With Aging Not Necessarily
Permanent, Animal Study Suggests
ScienceDaily
April 2, 2012
World
Scientists
from the Florida campus of The Scripps
Research Institute have shown in animal
models that the loss of memory that comes
with aging is not necessarily a permanent
thing.
In a new study published this week in an
advance, online edition of the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Science, Ron Davis, chair of the
Department of Neuroscience at Scripps
Florida, and Ayako Tonoki-Yamaguchi, a
research associate in Davis's lab, took a
close look at memory and memory traces in
the brains of both young and old fruit
flies.
What they found is that like other
organisms -- from mice to humans -- there
is a defect that occurs in memory with
aging. In the case of the fruit fly, the
ability to form memories lasting a few
hours (intermediate-term memory) is lost
due to age-related impairment of the
function of certain neurons. Intriguingly,
the scientists found that stimulating
those same neurons can reverse these
age-related memory defects.
"This study shows that once the
appropriate neurons are identified in
people, in principle at least, one could
potentially develop drugs to hit those
neurons and rescue those memories affected
by the aging process," Davis said. "In
addition, the biochemistry underlying
memory formation in fruit flies is
remarkably conserved with that in humans
so that everything we learn about memory
formation in flies is likely applicable to
human memory and the disorders of human
memory."
While no one really understands what is
altered in the brain during the aging
process, in the current study the
scientists were able to use functional
cellular imaging to monitor the changes in
the fly's neuron activity before and after
learning.
"We are able to peer down into the fly
brain and see changes in the brain," Davis
said. "We found changes that appear to
reflect how intermediate-term memory is
encoded in these neurons."
Olfactory memory, which was used by the
scientists, is the most widely studied
form of memory in fruit flies -- basically
pairing an odor with a mild electric
shock. These tactics produce short-term
memories that persist for around a
half-hour, intermediate-term memory that
lasts a few hours, and long-term memory
that persists for days.
The team found that in aged animals, the
signs of encoded memory were absent after
a few hours. In that way, the scientists
also learned exactly which neurons in the
fly are altered by aging to produce
intermediate-term memory impairment. This
advance, Davis notes, should greatly help
scientists understand how aging alters
neuronal function.
Intriguingly, the scientists took the work
a step further and stimulated these
neurons to see if the memory could be
rescued. To do this, the scientists placed
either cold-activated or heat-activated
ion channels in the neurons known to
become defective with aging and then used
cold or heat to stimulate them. In both
cases, the intermediate-term memory was
successfully rescued.
The study, "Aging Impairs
Intermediate-Term Behavioral Memory by
Disrupting the Neuron Memory Trace," was
supported by the Ellison Medical
Foundation and the Japan Society for the
Promotion of Science.
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