As much as you might want to wipe Uncle Frank’s tasteless
joke out of your mind but still remember the flavor of Aunt Fran’s pie, memory
researchers have always said “fuhgedabboudit!” Now, a genetically engineered
mouse suggests it may be possible to erase certain unwanted memories.
Scientists from the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta and the East
China Normal
University in Shanghai selectively removed a shocking
memory from a mouse’s brain, the team reports in the Oct. 23 Neuron.
Insight from such experiments may one day lead to therapies
that can erase traumatic memories for people suffering from post-traumatic
stress disorder, or wipe clean drug-associated cues that lead addicts to
relapse.
“We should never think of memories as being fixed,” says
Howard Eichenbaum, a neuroscientist at Boston University.
“They are constantly being renovated and restructured.”
Careful questioning can alter an eyewitness’s recollection
during testimony, Eichenbaum says. The new research, which he calls “terrific”
and “interesting,” shows that careful use of molecular tools can also
manipulate memories.
Joe Tsien, a neuroscientist at the Medical College of
Georgia, and his colleagues genetically engineered a mouse to carry an altered
version of a protein called alpha-calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase
II, or alpha-CaMKII.
A kinase enzyme, alpha-CaMKII is a type of regulatory
protein that governs the activity of other proteins. Previous research showed
that alpha-CaMKII is involved in learning and memory. Tsien and his colleagues
wanted to find out at which stage of memory the kinase enzyme is important. Stages
of memory include learning something new and then processing, retrieving and
storing the information.
Scientists are beginning to learn more about how memories
are made and stored. Memories are likely formed through interactions of brain
chemicals and changing connections between neurons. But exactly how that
happens and the physical form memory takes remain a mystery.
Researchers can use chemicals to block an enzyme’s activity,
but the business end of most kinase enzymes look alike, so most inhibitory chemicals
tend to block all kinase activity in the brain. Tsien got around that problem
by building a hidden cavity in alpha-CaMKII. A bulky chemical inhibitor fits
into the hidden cavity and blocks alpha-CaMKII from doing its job, but doesn’t
interfere with the action of other kinases. By manipulating activity of the
engineered protein, the researchers learned that alpha-CaMKII is important for
recalling memories.
A mouse might not be able to recall a memory for two reasons,
Tsien says. “Either you can’t open the door to get the memory, or you can open
the door but there’s no memory there.”
Altering alpha-CaMKII’s activity erases memories as they are
being retrieved, the researchers found. And the erasure is specific to the
memory being recalled.
The researchers placed mice in a chamber and played a sound,
then mildly shocked the mice’s feet. The mice learned to associate both the
chamber and the sound with a shock and would freeze in anticipation of getting
shocked when they entered the chamber or heard the sound.
Once the mouse learned to associate both the chamber and
sound with getting shocked, the researchers replayed one of the conditions
while altering activity of alpha-CaMKII. If the researchers placed the mouse in
the chamber but didn’t play the sound, only the memory of the chamber was
erased when alpha-CaMKII’s activity was altered. When tested again later, the
mouse forgot to freeze when placed in the chamber, but the mouse would still
freeze when it heard the sound. And if conditions were reversed and
alpha-CaMKII activity was altered when the mouse was recalling that the sound
signals a shock, the sound memory was erased. But the mice still remembered to
freeze when entering the chamber. Those results show that erasure is limited
only to the portion of the memory being recalled.
Eichenbaum is not convinced that Tsien and his colleagues
have erased the mice’s memories. Altering a memory so that it can’t be recalled
under certain circumstances might produce similar results, he says. “We never
know for sure that it’s really gone,” he says.
But if chemicals can help someone specifically forget
painful or traumatic memories, it may be irrelevant whether the memories are entirely
erased or are just altered beyond recognition, Eichenbaum says.
Memory-erasing pills are still science fiction, Tsien
stresses. This technique will never be used in people as it involves
genetically engineering a protein in the brain, he says. But future studies
might reveal other ways to selectively forget.
“We’ve only just put our foot on a very tall mountain,” he
says.
Found in: Body & Brain
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