State-dependent memory retrieval: insights from neural dynamics and behavioral perspectives
-
Published:2023-12
Issue:12
Volume:30
Page:325-337
-
ISSN:1549-5485
-
Container-title:Learning & Memory
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Learn. Mem.
Author:
Wang Fei,Chen Xu,Bo Binshi,Zhang Tianfu,Liu Kaiyuan,Jiang Jun,Wang Yonggang,Xie Hong,Liang Zhifeng,Guan Ji-Song
Abstract
Memory retrieval is strikingly susceptible to external states (environment) and internal states (mood states and alcohol), yet we know little about the underlying mechanisms. We examined how internally generated states influence successful memory retrieval using the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of laboratory mice during memory retrieval. Mice exhibited a strong tendency to perform memory retrieval correctly only in the reinstated mammillary body-inhibited state, in which mice were trained to discriminate auditory stimuli in go/no-go tasks. fMRI revealed that distinct auditory cues engaged differential brain regions, which were primed by internal state. Specifically, a cue associated with a reward activated the lateral amygdala, while a cue signaling no reward predominantly activated the postsubiculum. Modifying these internal states significantly altered the neural activity balance between these regions. Optogenetic inhibition of those regions in the precue period blocked the retrieval of type-specific memories. Our findings suggest that memory retrieval is under the control of two interrelated neural circuits underlying the neural basis of state-dependent memory retrieval.
Funder
Science and Technology Innovation 2030 Major Project of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Shanghai Ministry of Science and Technology
German Research Foundation
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology