4.4 Article

Synaptic plasticity/dysplasticity, process memory and item memory in rodent models of mental dysfunction

期刊

SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
卷 207, 期 -, 页码 22-36

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2018.08.025

关键词

Dysplasticity; Hippocampus; Neurodevelopment; Schizophrenia; Cognitive behavioral therapy; Synaptic function

资金

  1. NIH [R01MH099128, R01NS105472, R21NS091830]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Activity-dependent changes in the effective connection strength of synapses are a fundamental feature of a nervous system. This so-called synaptic plasticity is thought to underlie storage of information in memory and has been hypothesized to be crucial for the effects of cognitive behavioral therapy. Synaptic plasticity stores information in a neural network, creating a trace of neural activity from past experience. The plasticity can also change the behavior of the network so the network can differentially transform/compute information in future activations. We discuss these two related but separable functions of synaptic plasticity; one we call item memory as it represents and stores items of information in memory, the other we call process memory as it encodes and stores functions such as computations to modify network information processing capabilities. We review evidence of item and process memory operations in behavior and evidence that experience modifies the brain's functional networks. We discuss neurodevelopmental rodent models relevant for understanding mental illness and compare two models in which one model, neonatal ventral hippocampal lesion (NVHL) has beneficial adult outcomes after being exposed to an adolescent cognitive experience that is potentially similar to cognitive behavioral therapy. The other model, gestational day 17 methylazoxymethanol acetate (GD17-MAM), does not benefit from the same adolescent cognitive experience. We propose that process memory is altered by early cognitive experience in NVHL rats but not in GD17-MAM rats, and discuss how dysplasticity factors may contribute to the differential adult outcomes after early cognitive experience in the NVHL and MAM models. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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