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Circuit Mechanisms Remote Memory

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Circuit Mechanisms of Remote Memory

Lauren DeNardo, PhD

Assistant Professor

Department of Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA

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Monday, February 10, 2025

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Monday, February 10, 2025

10:30 AM America/New_York

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Abstract

Memories of emotionally-salient events are long-lasting, guiding behavior from minutes to years after learning. The prelimbic cortex (PL) is required for fear memory retrieval across time and is densely interconnected with many subcortical and cortical areas involved in recent and remote memory recall, including the temporal association area (TeA). While the behavioral expression of a memory may remain constant over time, the neural activity mediating memory-guided behavior is dynamic. In PL, different neurons underlie recent and remote memory retrieval and remote memory-encoding neurons have preferential functional connectivity with cortical association areas, including TeA. TeA plays a preferential role in remote compared to recent memory retrieval, yet how TeA circuits drive remote memory retrieval remains poorly understood. Here we used a combination of activity-dependent neuronal tagging, viral circuit mapping and miniscope imaging to investigate the role of the PL-TeA circuit in fear memory retrieval across time in mice. We show that PL memory ensembles recruit PL-TeA neurons across time, and that PL-TeA neurons have enhanced encoding of salient cues and behaviors at remote timepoints. This recruitment depends upon ongoing synaptic activity in the learning-activated PL ensemble. Our results reveal a novel circuit encoding remote memory and provide insight into the principles of memory circuit reorganization across time.

Topics

circuit mappingfear memorymemory encodingmemory retrievalneuronal taggingprelimbic cortexremote memorysynaptic activitytemporal association area

About the Speaker

Lauren DeNardo, PhD

Assistant Professor

Department of Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA

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