Erasing long-term memories in rats
Researchers used a protein injection to wipe out a long-term memory in rats. The scientists at Insrael's Weizmann Institute of Science and the State University of New York conditioned the rodents to associate a certain smell with being sick. Then, the injected the rat's brains with a protein, called ZIP, that inactivates an enzyme thought to be essential to the continued storage of long-term memory. Even after a month, the mice showed no memory of the previous conditioning associating the odor with illness. From News@Nature:
Previously on BB:
• New techniques to wipe out specific memories Link
UPDATE: BB reader Gary O'Brien writes, "WNYC's Radiolab, a fantastic geekfest of a radio show, did an episode on the very nature of memory and touched on research very similar to that you posted today." Link
"No matter what we did, the memory never came back," says (State University of New York neuroscientist Todd) Sacktor.Link
The team suggests that PKM-zeta could maintain memory by creating new receptors for neurotransmitter molecules, says Dudai. A so-far unidentified mechanism that keeps this enzyme active would then be crucial for keeping hold of long-term memories. By blocking PKM-zeta, ZIP may halt this process. "It's like placing a stick in an engine. The minute you stop it the memory collapses," says Dudai.
Previously on BB:
• New techniques to wipe out specific memories Link
UPDATE: BB reader Gary O'Brien writes, "WNYC's Radiolab, a fantastic geekfest of a radio show, did an episode on the very nature of memory and touched on research very similar to that you posted today." Link


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