Rewiring the Brain: The Neural Code of Traumatic Memories

Summary: Unveiling the neurological enigma of traumatic memory formation, researchers harnessed innovative optical and machine-learning methodologies to decode the brain’s neuronal networks engaged during trauma memory creation.

The team identified a neural population encoding fear memory, revealing the synchronous activation and crucial role of the dorsal part of the medial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) in associative fear memory retrieval in mice.

Groundbreaking analytical approaches, including the ‘elastic net’ machine-learning algorithm, pinpointed specific neurons and their functional connectivity within the spatial and functional fear-memory neural network.

This pivotal study not only substantiates the principle that memories strengthen through enhanced neural connections but also pioneers the melding of optics and machine learning to elucidate the intricate dynamics of neural networks.

Key Facts:

  1. Innovation in Methodology: The research utilized a novel method combining optical and machine-learning-based approaches to identify the specific neurons encoding fear memory.
  2. Neural Network for Fear: The study detected a neural population that encodes fear memory, establishing a fear-memory neural network with ‘hub’ neurons that functionally connect memory neurons.
  3. Associative Memory Formation: The creation of a novel associative connection between distinct networks (conditioned and unconditioned stimulus networks) was discovered, proposing a new understanding of information processing that triggers a fear response.

Source: NINS

Scientists have long speculated about the physical changes that occur in the brain when a new memory is formed. Now, research from the National Institute for Physiological Sciences (NIPS) has shed light on this intriguing neurological mystery.

In a study recently published in Nature Communications, the research team has succeeded in detecting the brain neuronal networks involved in trauma memory by using a novel method that combines optical and machine-learning-based approaches, capturing the complex changes that occur during memory formation and uncovering the mechanisms by which trauma memories are created.

This shows a brain.
Memories have long been thought to be formed by the enhancement of neural connections, which are strengthened by the repeated activation of groups of neurons. Credit: Neuroscience News

Animals learn to adapt to changing environments for survival. Associative learning, which includes classical conditioning, is one of the simplest types of learning and has been studied intensively over the past century.

During the last two decades, technical developments in molecular, genetic, and optogenetic methods have made it possible to identify brain regions and specific populations of neurons that control the formation and retrieval of new associative memories. For instance, the dorsal part of the medial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) is critical for the retrieval of associative fear memory in rodents.

However, the way in which the neurons in this region encode and retrieve associative memory is not well understood, which the research team aimed to address.

“The dmPFC shows specific neural activation and synchrony during fear-memory retrieval and evoked fear responses, such as freezing and heart rate deceleration,” explains lead author Masakazu Agetsuma.

“Artificial silencing of the dmPFC in mice suppressed fear responses, indicating that this region is required to recall associative fear-memory. Because it is connected with brain systems implicated in learning and associated psychiatric diseases, we wanted to explore how changes in the dmPFC specifically regulate new associative memory information.”

The research team used longitudinal two-photon imaging and various computational neuroscience techniques to determine how neural activity changes in the mouse prefrontal cortex after learning in a fear-conditioning paradigm.

Prefrontal neurons behave in a highly complex manner, and each neuron responds to various sensory and motor events. To address this complexity, the research team developed a new analytical method based on the ‘elastic net,’ a machine-learning algorithm, to identify which specific neurons encode fear memory.

They further analyzed the spatial arrangement and functional connectivity of the neurons using graphical modeling.

 “We successfully detected a neural population that encodes fear memory,” says Agetsuma. “Our analyses showed us that fear conditioning induced the formation of a fear-memory neural network with ‘hub’ neurons that functionally connected the memory neurons.”

Importantly, the researchers uncovered direct evidence that associative memory formation was accompanied by a novel associative connection between originally distinct networks, i.e., the conditioned stimulus (CS, e.g., tone) network and the unconditioned stimulus (US, e.g., fearful experience) network.

“We propose that this newly discovered connection might facilitate information processing by triggering a fear response (CR) to a CS (i.e., a neural network for CS-to-CR transformation).”

Memories have long been thought to be formed by the enhancement of neural connections, which are strengthened by the repeated activation of groups of neurons. The findings of the present study, which were based on both real-life observations and model-based analysis, support this.

Furthermore, the study demonstrates how combined methods (optics and machine learning) can be used to visualize the dynamics of neural networks in great detail. These techniques could be used to uncover additional information about the neurological changes associated with learning and memory.

About this PTSD and neuroscience research news

Author: Hayao KIMURA
Source: NINS
Contact: Hayao KIMURA – NINS
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
Activity-dependent organization of prefrontal hub-networks for associative learning and signal transformation” by Masakazu Agetsuma et al. Nature Communications


Abstract

Activity-dependent organization of prefrontal hub-networks for associative learning and signal transformation

Associative learning is crucial for adapting to environmental changes. Interactions among neuronal populations involving the dorso-medial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) are proposed to regulate associative learning, but how these neuronal populations store and process information about the association remains unclear.

Here we developed a pipeline for longitudinal two-photon imaging and computational dissection of neural population activities in male mouse dmPFC during fear-conditioning procedures, enabling us to detect learning-dependent changes in the dmPFC network topology.

Using regularized regression methods and graphical modeling, we found that fear conditioning drove dmPFC reorganization to generate a neuronal ensemble encoding conditioned responses (CR) characterized by enhanced internal coactivity, functional connectivity, and association with conditioned stimuli (CS).

Importantly, neurons strongly responding to unconditioned stimuli during conditioning subsequently became hubs of this novel associative network for the CS-to-CR transformation.

Altogether, we demonstrate learning-dependent dynamic modulation of population coding structured on the activity-dependent formation of the hub network within the dmPFC.

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  1. Please contact me sufferer of neurological & rheumatological & other deblitating immobolising immobilty dissabilitating illness’s & other illness’s kind regards
    Kath

  2. That can be treated with psychological therapy. Besides that, try listening to classical music, mainly Mozart,sonata K 448 everyday. You’ll see results in 2 to 3 weeks.

  3. That’s awesome. I wondered whether trauma was a “tearing down” of neuronal connections (to break habits of behavior or thinking that are now unsafe) or a “building up” of new connections. This makes sense: the brain must build these new connections, and urgently. I hypothesize that these new connections formed by association between fear and memory are…haphazard? So, instead of a finely tuned memory generated by non-stressful learning (e.g., reading a book about bats) instead the associative learning creates ties with any stimuli that is potentially relevant, “just in case”. So the small details involved in the original trauma then become triggers for the associative fear memory: a certain perfume, the smell of alcohol, being touched a certain way. The fear memory complex created by trauma is fast, robust, and not specific enough to be useful for everyday functioning, merely survival for the next day.

  4. When the authors write these articles, please can you ask them to include summaries of the points being made in layman’s terms so more people can understand what they’re saying. A few: ‘in other words’ would be helpful.

  5. Do you have any research on Psychogenic tremor? I have had this since 2018, am wondering what the prospects are of getting rid of it?

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