Author:
Costa Alessia,Ducourneau Eva,Curti Lorenzo,Masi Alessio,Mannaioni Guido,Hardt Lola,Biyong Essi F.,Potier Mylène,Blandina Patrizio,Trifilieff Pierre,Provensi Gustavo,Ferreira Guillaume,Passani M. Beatrice
Abstract
AbstractSeveral lines of evidence demonstrate that the brain histaminergic system is fundamental for cognitive processes and the expression of memories. Here, we investigated the effect of acute silencing or activation of histaminergic neurons in the hypothalamic tuberomamillary nucleus (TMNHA neurons) in vivo in both sexes in an attempt to provide direct and causal evidence of the necessary role of these neurons in recognition memory formation and retrieval. To this end, we compared the performance of mice in two non-aversive and non-rewarded memory tests, the social and object recognition memory tasks, which are known to recruit different brain circuitries. To directly establish the impact of inactivation or activation of TMNHA neurons, we examined the effect of specific chemogenetic manipulations during the formation (acquisition/consolidation) or retrieval of recognition memories. We consistently found that acute chemogenetic silencing of TMNHA neurons disrupts the formation or retrieval of both social and object recognition memory in males and females. Conversely, acute chemogenetic activation of TMNHA neurons during training or retrieval extended social memory in both sexes and object memory in a sex-specific fashion. These results suggest that the formation or retrieval of recognition memory requires the tonic activity of histaminergic neurons and strengthen the concept that boosting the brain histaminergic system can promote the retrieval of apparently lost memories.
Funder
Italian Ministry of Research, Flag-Era/Human Brain Project HA-Ction
Franco-Italian PHC Galileo project
French National Research Agency (ANR) FlagEra,Human Brain project HA-Ction
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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