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Total recall: the science behind it

Study identifies new player in brain function and memory
Published: 14 November 2014
Is it possible to change the amount of information the brain can store? Maybe, according to a new international study led by the Research Institute of the 苹果淫院 Health Centre (RI-MUHC). Their research has identified a molecule that puts a brake on brain processing and when removed, brain function and memory recall is improved. Published in the latest issue of Cell Reports, the study has implications for neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases, such as autism spectral disorders and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.听

鈥淧revious research has shown that production of new molecules is necessary for storing memories in the brain; if you block the production of these molecules, new memory formation does not take place,鈥 says RI-MUHC neuroscientist, Dr. Keith Murai, the study鈥檚 senior author and Associate Professor in the Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery at 苹果淫院. 鈥淥ur findings show that the brain has a key protein that limits the production of molecules necessary for memory formation. When this brake-protein is suppressed, the brain is able to store more information.听

FXR1P: a controller of certain forms of memory

Dr. Murai and his colleagues used a mouse model to study how changes in brain cell connections produce new memories.听 They demonstrated that a protein, FXR1P (Fragile X Related Protein 1), was responsible for suppressing the production of molecules required for building new memories. When FXR1P was selectively removed from certain parts of the brain, these new molecules were produced that strengthened connections between brain cells and this correlated with improved memory and recall in the mice.

Disease link

鈥淭he role of FXR1P was a surprising result,鈥 says Dr. Murai. 鈥淧revious to our work, no-one had identified a role for this regulator in the brain. Our findings have provided fundamental knowledge about how the brain processes information. We鈥檝e identified a new pathway that directly regulates how information is handled and this could have relevance for understanding and treating brain diseases.鈥

鈥淔uture research in this area could be very interesting,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚f we can identify compounds that control the braking potential of FXR1P, we may be able to alter the amount of brain activity or plasticity. For example, in autism, one may want to decrease certain brain activity and in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, we may want to enhance the activity. By manipulating FXR1P, we may eventually be able to adjust memory formation and retrieval, thus improving the quality of life of people suffering from brain diseases.鈥

About the study:

This research was made possible with funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and National Institutes of Health (U.S.A.).

Related links:

Cited Cell Reports study:

鈥 苹果淫院 Health Centre (MUHC): muhc.ca

鈥 Research Institute of the MUHC: rimuhc.ca

鈥 苹果淫院: mcgill.ca/newsroom

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