Table of Contents

Project: NEURALIZER

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Final goal:

Planned usage:

Progress:

Metods:

Testing:

Notes:

Mu59KU2RyYs

PKMζ

source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_kinase_M_zeta/Protein_kinase_C_zeta

PKMζ is thought to be responsible for maintaining the late phase of long-term potentiation (LTP).[3][4][5] This theory arose from the observation that PKMζ perfused post synaptically into neurons causes synaptic potentiation, and selective inhibitors of PKMζ, when bath applied one hour after tetanization, inhibit the late phase or maintenance of LTP. Thus PKMζ is both necessary and sufficient for maintaining LTP. Subsequent work showed that inhibiting PKMζ reversed LTP maintenance when applied up to 5 hours after LTP was induced in hippocampal slices, and after 22 hours in vivo. Inhibiting PKMζ in behaving animals erased spatial long-term memories in the hippocampus that were up to one month old, without affecting spatial short-term memories,[5] and erased long-term memories for fear conditioning and inhibitory avoidance in the basolateral amygdala.[6] In the neocortex, thought to be the site of storage for most long-term memories, PKMζ inhibition erased associative memories for conditioned taste aversion in the insular cortex, up to 3 months after training.[7][8] The protein also seems to be involved, through the nucleus accumbens, in the consolidation and reconsolidation of the memory related to drug addiction.[9]PKMζ is thus the first molecule shown to be a component of the storage mechanism of long-term memory.

Recent research has demonstrated alteration in PKMζ in Alzheimer's disease (see Long-term potentiation), providing a potential link between this kinase and neurodegeneration.[10]

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/tag/pkmzeta/

soure:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/03/03/exposing-the-memory-engine-the-story-of-pkmzeta/

Once it’s made, PKMzeta probably only lasts for a matter of days. So our synapses need to constantly replenish their supply of this protein, if we’re to keep stable long-term memories. Fortunately, a series of looping chemical reactions ensures that once neurons continue producing PKMzeta, they don’t stop. Once the memory engine starts whirring, it can carry on indefinitely. If the experiments with rats are a guide to what’s happening in people, “PKMzeta is staying in the same synapse probably for decades,” says Sacktor. “It’s not the same molecule but the population is being maintained at a high level for maybe a hundred years.”

PKMzeta works by increasing the levels of AMPAR, a protein that sits at synapses and allows fast signals to travel across them. Normally, AMPAR is caught in a tug-of-war between proteins that try to drag it towards the synapse and others that drag it away. PKMzeta swings the battle in favour of the former group. When it’s around, AMPAR moves towards the synapse in great numbers. Each arrival strengthens the synapse.

This is a constant battle. Other proteins are always trying to drive AMPAR away from the synapse, so PKMzeta has to fight to keep it there. This is why it’s so easy to erase memories with ZIP. If you get rid of PKMzeta, the tide of battle turns, AMPAR is driven away, the synapse weakens, and memories are forgotten.

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/03/03/todd-sacktor-talks-about-the-memory-engine/

Reconsolidation window

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/01/26/an-injection-and-a-nap-two-ways-of-strengthening-memories/

It’s not a permanent state. Whenever we remember something, the fragile window reopens. Again, it’s more like opening a computer document than getting notes out of a drawer. You could easily add, edit or delete information at a flick of a key. Every time we bring back an old memory, we run the risk of changing it. Again, it takes a while for this window of opportunity to close, for the reactivated memory to strengthen once more. This is called ‘reconsolidation’.

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/12/09/rewriting-fearful-memories-by-bringing-them-back-to-mind/ notes :

Propanolol

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/02/16/beta-blocker-drug-erases-the-emotion-of-fearful-memories/

Two days later, and things were very different. Now, Kindt found that the while the volunteers on the placebo still feared the spiders, those who had been given propranolol no longer did. In fact, they were as difficult to startle as volunteers who had been conditioned in the first place. The drug had completely eliminated their fear response.

CREB

source:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/03/12/erasing-a-memory-reveals-the-neurons-that-encode-it/