Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.

Memories are formed, stabilized in a time-dependent manner, and stored in neural networks. In Drosophila, retrieval of punitive and rewarded odor memories depends on output from mushroom body (MB) neurons, consistent with the idea that both types of memory are represented there. Dorsal Paired Medial...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keene, A, Krashes, M, Leung, B, Bernard, J, Waddell, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2006
_version_ 1797067670068133888
author Keene, A
Krashes, M
Leung, B
Bernard, J
Waddell, S
author_facet Keene, A
Krashes, M
Leung, B
Bernard, J
Waddell, S
author_sort Keene, A
collection OXFORD
description Memories are formed, stabilized in a time-dependent manner, and stored in neural networks. In Drosophila, retrieval of punitive and rewarded odor memories depends on output from mushroom body (MB) neurons, consistent with the idea that both types of memory are represented there. Dorsal Paired Medial (DPM) neurons innervate the mushroom bodies, and DPM neuron output is required for the stability of punished odor memory. Here we show that stable reward-odor memory is also DPM neuron dependent. DPM neuron expression of amnesiac (amn) in amn mutant flies restores wild-type memory. In addition, disrupting DPM neurotransmission between training and testing abolishes reward-odor memory, just as it does with punished memory. We further examined DPM-MB connectivity by overexpressing a DScam variant that reduces DPM neuron projections to the MB alpha, beta, and gamma lobes. DPM neurons that primarily project to MB alpha' and beta' lobes are capable of stabilizing punitive- and reward-odor memory, implying that both forms of memory have similar circuit requirements. Therefore, our results suggest that the fly employs the local DPM-MB circuit to stabilize punitive- and reward-odor memories and that stable aspects of both forms of memory may reside in mushroom body alpha' and beta' lobe neurons.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:59:41Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:4e25a43b-2cb9-4443-8609-20c7b20df2ee
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:59:41Z
publishDate 2006
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:4e25a43b-2cb9-4443-8609-20c7b20df2ee2022-03-26T15:59:35ZDrosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4e25a43b-2cb9-4443-8609-20c7b20df2eeEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2006Keene, AKrashes, MLeung, BBernard, JWaddell, SMemories are formed, stabilized in a time-dependent manner, and stored in neural networks. In Drosophila, retrieval of punitive and rewarded odor memories depends on output from mushroom body (MB) neurons, consistent with the idea that both types of memory are represented there. Dorsal Paired Medial (DPM) neurons innervate the mushroom bodies, and DPM neuron output is required for the stability of punished odor memory. Here we show that stable reward-odor memory is also DPM neuron dependent. DPM neuron expression of amnesiac (amn) in amn mutant flies restores wild-type memory. In addition, disrupting DPM neurotransmission between training and testing abolishes reward-odor memory, just as it does with punished memory. We further examined DPM-MB connectivity by overexpressing a DScam variant that reduces DPM neuron projections to the MB alpha, beta, and gamma lobes. DPM neurons that primarily project to MB alpha' and beta' lobes are capable of stabilizing punitive- and reward-odor memory, implying that both forms of memory have similar circuit requirements. Therefore, our results suggest that the fly employs the local DPM-MB circuit to stabilize punitive- and reward-odor memories and that stable aspects of both forms of memory may reside in mushroom body alpha' and beta' lobe neurons.
spellingShingle Keene, A
Krashes, M
Leung, B
Bernard, J
Waddell, S
Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title_full Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title_fullStr Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title_full_unstemmed Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title_short Drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation.
title_sort drosophila dorsal paired medial neurons provide a general mechanism for memory consolidation
work_keys_str_mv AT keenea drosophiladorsalpairedmedialneuronsprovideageneralmechanismformemoryconsolidation
AT krashesm drosophiladorsalpairedmedialneuronsprovideageneralmechanismformemoryconsolidation
AT leungb drosophiladorsalpairedmedialneuronsprovideageneralmechanismformemoryconsolidation
AT bernardj drosophiladorsalpairedmedialneuronsprovideageneralmechanismformemoryconsolidation
AT waddells drosophiladorsalpairedmedialneuronsprovideageneralmechanismformemoryconsolidation