
Why Emotional Memories Of Traumatic Life Events
Are So Persistent
ScienceDaily (May 11, 2008) —
Emotional memories of traumatic life events such as accidents, war experiences
or serious illnesses are stored in a particularly robust way by the brain.
This renders effective treatment very difficult. Researchers at ETH Zurich and
the University of Zurich have now successfully tracked down the molecular
bases of these strong, very persistent memories.
The expression “post-traumatic stress disorder” is once again constantly
on everyone’s lips in relation to those returning from the Iraq war or
survivors of catastrophes such as the tsunami. This is not a new development,
since it always occurs when people experience extreme situations. It is known
that emotional memories of both a positive and a negative kind are stored by our
brain in a particularly robust way.
Consequently they have a very large effect on our behaviour and, in the case
of adverse memories, they can place considerable restrictions on the way we go
about our lives. As a result, we avoid places, smells or objects that remind us
of the traumatic experience, because they may trigger severe anxieties. Isabelle
Mansuy, Professor of Cellular Neurobiology at ETH Zurich and of Molecular and
Cognitive Neurosciences at the University of Zurich, and her research group have
now shown that the enzyme calcineurin and the gene regulation factor Zif268
decisively determine the intensity of emotional memories. For the first time,
this has enabled the regulatory processes at the synapse, which are important
for emotional memories, to be linked to the processes in the cell nucleus.
Mice as an ideal model system
The generation of very persistent memories in the shortest possible time
needs molecules in the brain that are not only activated rapidly but which also
efficiently control the signalling pathways of long-term information storage in
the brain. This is why the protein phosphatase calcineurin, which was already
known to have a negative regulatory effect on learning and memory, was a very
promising candidate for the Zurich researchers. The researchers used mice as the
model system because their learning processes are very similar to those in
humans, and established behavioural tests already exist. In their experiments,
the researchers conditioned the mice to associate a sugar solution with nausea.
This association persists for many months. The mice avoid the sugar solution
during this period.
However, their aversion can be overcome slowly through intensive training.
Mansuy explains that “Emotional memories are not simply erased. Oppressive
negative memories need to be actively replaced by positive memories.” She says
it is important at the same time to understand that the negative memories do not
disappear, they merely slide down in a kind of priority list and are outweighed
by the newly learned positive memories. Mansuy says “This process is not final
and absolute, since the priority list can change again.” Karsten Baumgärtel,
a post-doctoral researcher in Mansuy’s group, stresses that this is a big
difference between emotional memories and learned knowledge. “It is entirely
possible for facts to vanish completely from the memory, whereas in extreme
cases emotional recollections remain stored for a whole lifetime. Active
intervention is necessary to reduce the priority level of negative memories.”
Reduced calcineurin activity
Studies of the amygdala, that part of the brain which is important for
emotional perception, showed reduced activity of the enzyme calcineurin in
conditioned mice compared to mice in which no association with nausea had been
generated. Because calcineurin is a negative regulator of learning and memory,
its activity needs to be reduced to enable strong memorisation. To gain more
evidence about the role of calcineurin in the memory process, the researchers
used transgenic mice in which they were able to selectively activate or
deactivate the enzyme in nerve cells of the brain. Mansuy explains that “This
selective activation and inactivation in nerve cells is important because
calcineurin is an enzyme that occurs in many cells.
For example it also plays an important part in the immune defence system.”
As the researchers expected, inactivating calcineurin strengthened the memory of
the association between sugar solution and nausea, whereas the memory was
weakened by increased calcineurin activity. The researchers were also able to
demonstrate that the period of time needed to suppress the negative memory by a
purely positive memory could be prolonged or shortened respectively by this
intervention.
Regulation processes in synapses and the cell nucleus
Inactivating calcineurin also causes increased expression of the gene
regulator Zif268 in the amygdala. Zif268 is responsible for regulating a wide
variety of important genes that play a role in the signal processing of memories
and learning. Simulating this increased expression of Zif268 in transgenic mice
intensified memory in a similar way to the inactivation of calcineurin. This is
the first occasion on which it has been possible to demonstrate this magnitude
of functional relationship between the activity of an enzyme in the synapse and
that of a gene regulation factor in the cell nucleus.
Mansuy and Baumgärtel stress that the purpose of their research is to gain a
fundamental understanding of the molecular relationships, but that it is not
associated in any way with a direct clinical application in the near future.
However, Mansuy explains that: “In the past, the origin of many diseases was
unknown and they were regarded as a punishment from God, and at that time those
who were affected went to the priest. Nowadays we understand the mechanisms
underlying them and can treat these illnesses. We hope that our research has
made a small contribution to enabling the same situation also to apply in the
future to psychological traumas or brain diseases with memory weakness such as
Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and strokes.”
Journal reference:
- Karsten Baumgärtel, David Genoux, Hans Welzl, Ry Y Tweedie-Cullen, Kyoko
Koshibu, Magdalena Livingstone-Zatchej, Céline Mamie & Isabelle M
Mansuy: Control of the establishment of aversive memory by calcineurin and
Zif268. Nature Neuroscience 2008 May;11(5):572-8. Published on-line on 20
April 2008. doi: 10.1038/nn.2113
Adapted from materials provided by ETH
Zurich. Original article written by Nicole Kasielke.
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