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Protein Synthesis Blockade Prevents Fear Memory Reactivation via Inhibition of Engram Synapse Strengthening

Publicada
Servidor
bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/2025.02.05.636389

Memory relies on ensembles of engram cells in the brain. While previous studies have established the existence of these cells, the relationship between cellular and synaptic activity remains unclear. To address this, we applied the dual e-GRASP technique in mice to examine synaptic connectivity between the ventral CA1 and the basal amygdala during memory formation. We found that contextual fear conditioning increased engram-to-engram synapse (engram synapse) density and induced structural potentiation, underscoring their importance in associative memory. Additionally, we investigated the role of protein synthesis in memory formation by inducing retrograde amnesia using anisomycin, a protein synthesis inhibitor. Mice injected with anisomycin once (1xANI) showed impaired natural recall but still displayed fear responses upon optogenetic reactivation of engram cells. In contrast, mice that received four anisomycin injections over six hours (4xANI) showed significantly impaired natural recall and failed to exhibit fear responses upon optogenetic reactivation. This behavioural phenotype was correlated with synaptic changes: 1xANI mice exhibited no significant reduction in engram synapse density but had significantly smaller spine sizes, whereas 4xANI mice showed both a significant reduction in engram synapse density and spine size. Our results indicate that protein synthesis inhibition significantly reduces engram synapse density and spine size, changes that correlate with reductions in fear memory during both natural recall and artificial reactivation.

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