Scientists successfully retrieve lost memories... using light
Hopes raised for treatment of severe amnesia after
scientists retrieve lost memory using light
A study on laboratory mice has found that a lost memory
is still stored within brain cells even though the animals had apparently lost
ability to retrieve it
By Steve Connor Science Editor
Thursday 28 May 2015
Lost memories have been retrieved with the help of light
in a study that could further the understanding and treatment of patients with
severe amnesia following injury or disease.
A study on laboratory mice has found that a lost memory
is still stored within the brain cells even though the animals had apparently
lost their ability to retrieve it, scientists said.
Scientists have long debated the nature of amnesia, with
many researchers suggesting that the problem is due to the storage of memory
rather than the inability to retrieve it from long-term memory banks of the
brain.
In a series of experiments on mice involving a technique
called optogenetics – when light is used to activate specific nerve cells in
the brain – the researchers found that it was possible for the mice to remember
a memory that had previously been lost.
“The majority of researchers have favoured the storage
theory, but we have shown in this [study] that this majority theory is probably
wrong. Amnesia is a problem of retrieval impairment,” said Susumu Tonegawa of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
A condition known as retrograde amnesia, when memory loss
occurs after traumatic injury, stress or diseases such as Alzheimer’s, is
probably caused by damage to the brain cells involving memory retrieval rather
than memory storage, he said.
The study, published in the journal Science, found that
the storage of memory is caused by building new connections between nerves
cells in the brain, while the ability to retrieve the memory involves the
strengthening of these connections, which can be blocked when the brain is
damaged by injury or disease.
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