logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Hypothalamic CRH neurons represent physiological memory of positive and negative experience

Medicine and Health

Hypothalamic CRH neurons represent physiological memory of positive and negative experience

T. Füzesi, N. P. Rasiah, et al.

This study, conducted by Tamás Füzesi and colleagues, delves into the neural mechanisms underlying physiological memory, revealing how corticotropin-releasing hormone-synthesizing neurons in the hypothalamus respond differently to negative and positive stimuli. The findings highlight a fascinating disconnect between behavioral responses and the physiological changes in memory storage.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Recalling a salient experience provokes specific behaviors and changes in the physiology or internal state. Relatively little is known about how physiological memories are encoded. We examined the neural substrates of physiological memory by probing CRH^PVN neurons of mice, which control the endocrine response to stress. Here we show these cells exhibit contextual memory following exposure to a stimulus with negative or positive valence. Specifically, a negative stimulus invokes a two-factor learning rule that favors an increase in the activity of weak cells during recall. In contrast, the contextual memory of positive valence relies on a one-factor rule to decrease activity of CRH^PVN neurons. Finally, the aversive memory in CRH^PVN neurons outlasts the behavioral response. These observations provide information about how specific physiological memories of aversive and appetitive experience are represented and demonstrate that behavioral readouts may not accurately reflect physiological changes invoked by the memory of salient experiences.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Dec 21, 2023
Authors
Tamás Füzesi, Neilen P. Rasiah, David G. Rosenegger, Mijail Rojas-Carvajal, Taylor Chomiak, Núria Daviu, Leonardo A. Molina, Kathryn Simone, Toni-Lee Sterley, Wilten Nicola, Jaideep S. Bains
Tags
corticotropin-releasing hormone
hypothalamus
neurons
memory
contextual stimuli
valence
learning
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny