4.7 Article

Adult Neurogenesis Conserves Hippocampal Memory Capacity

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 31, Pages 6854-6863

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2976-17.2018

Keywords

neurogenesis; hippocampus; learning and memory; memory capacity; synaptic plasticity

Categories

Funding

  1. Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST) program of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) Science and Technology Agency [JPMJCR13W1]
  2. MEXT [JP25115002]
  3. Mitsubishi Foundation
  4. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  5. Takeda Science Foundation
  6. Sasagawa Scientific Grants [22-440]
  7. Nakamura-Sekizenkai [K2012011006]
  8. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS KAKENH) [JP23220009]

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The hippocampus is crucial for declarative memories in humans and encodes episodic and spatial memories in animals. Memory coding strengthens synaptic efficacy via an LTP-like mechanism. Given that animals store memories of everyday experiences, the hippocampal circuit must have a mechanism that prevents saturation of overall synaptic weight for the preservation of learning capacity. LTD works to balance plasticity and prevent saturation. In addition, adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus is proposed to be involved in the down-scaling of synaptic efficacy. Here, we show that adult neurogenesis in male rats plays a crucial role in the maintenance of hippocampal capacity formemory (learning and/ormemoryformation). Neurogenesis regulated the maintenance of LTP, with decreases and increases in neurogenesis prolonging or shortening LTP persistence, respectively. Artificial saturation of hippocampal LTP impaired memory capacity in contextual fear conditioning, which completely recovered after 14 d, which was the time required for LTP to decay to the basal level. Memory capacity gradually recovered in parallel with neurogenesis-mediated gradual decay of LTP. Ablation of neurogenesis by x-ray irradiation delayed the recovery of memory capacity, whereas enhancement of neurogenesis using a running wheel sped up recovery. Therefore, one benefit of ongoing adult neurogenesis is the maintenance of hippocampal memory capacity through homeostatic renewing of hippocampal memory circuits. Decreased neurogenesis in aged animals may be responsible for the decline in cognitive function with age.

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