Toward a molecular definition of long-term memory storage

Craig H. Bailey(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Dušan Bartsch(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Eric R. Kandel(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 26, 1996
Cited by 697Open Access
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Abstract

The storage of long-term memory is associated with a cellular program of gene expression, altered protein synthesis, and the growth of new synaptic connections. Recent studies of a variety of memory processes, ranging in complexity from those produced by simple forms of implicit learning in invertebrates to those produced by more complex forms of explicit learning in mammals, suggest that part of the molecular switch required for consolidation of long-term memory is the activation of a cAMP-inducible cascade of genes and the recruitment of cAMP response element binding protein-related transcription factors. This conservation of steps in the mechanisms for learning-related synaptic plasticity suggests the possibility of a molecular biology of cognition.


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