Which Neurons Will Be the Engram - Activated Neurons and/or More Excitable Neurons?

During past decades, the formation and storage principle of memory have received much attention in the neuroscience field. Although some studies have attempted to demonstrate the nature of the engram, elucidating the memory engram allocation mechanism was not possible because of the limitations of e...

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Published inExperimental neurobiology Vol. 25; no. 2; pp. 55 - 63
Main Authors Kim, Ji-il, Cho, Hye-Yeon, Han, Jin-Hee, Kaang, Bong-Kiun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Korea (South) The Korean Society for Brain and Neural Science 01.04.2016
한국뇌신경과학회
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ISSN1226-2560
2093-8144
DOI10.5607/en.2016.25.2.55

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Summary:During past decades, the formation and storage principle of memory have received much attention in the neuroscience field. Although some studies have attempted to demonstrate the nature of the engram, elucidating the memory engram allocation mechanism was not possible because of the limitations of existing methods, which cannot specifically modulate the candidate neuronal population. Recently, the development of new techniques, which offer ways to mark and control specific populations of neurons, may accelerate solving this issue. Here, we review the recent advances, which have provided substantial evidence showing that both candidates (neuronal population that is activated by learning, and that has increased CREB level/excitability at learning) satisfy the criteria of the engram, which are necessary and sufficient for memory expression.
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G704-SER000009883.2016.25.2.003
ISSN:1226-2560
2093-8144
DOI:10.5607/en.2016.25.2.55