Abstract:
Introduction. Learning and memory have proven to be fascinating mental processes because
they address one of the fundamental features of human activity: our ability to acquire new
informations and to retain it over time in memory. (Kandel ER, 2001). The brain has to process
a continuous input from our sensory organs and at the same time it must be able to store
memories, sometimes even for a lifetime. One of the fundamental questions in memory
research is how our experiences of life can persist over time. What is the cellular foundation of
this long-term information storage of neurons in neuronal networks, which is so important for
humans? It is generally acknowledged that the memory processes are the result of the interplay
between synaptic plasticity and orchestrated network activity that finally culminates in the
long-term storage of information. Overall, information storage starts with the encoding of new
information and progresses to the short-term memory. At this stage the engram might be either
consolidated for a lifetime, destabilized, or restabilized in the course of memory retrieval.
These neuronal dynamics start and end with synaptic and cellular plasticity and can be observed
at the behavioral level (Korte M, Schmitz D, 2016). The formation of long-term memory
involves gene transcription, protein synthesis and synaptic plasticity dynamics. This plasticity
is dependent on a well-regulated program of neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic receptor
activation, intracellular signaling cascades, gene transcription, and subsequent protein synthesis. In the last decade, epigenetic markers like DNA methylation and posttranslational
modifications of histone tails have emerged as important regulators of the memory process.
(Zovkic IB et al, 2013).
Description:
Department of Human Physiology
and Biophisics, Nicolae Testemitanu State University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Chisinau,
Republic of Moldova, The 8th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors, September 24-26, 2020