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Classical eyeblink conditioning is a representative associative motor learning that requires both the cerebellar cortex and the deep cerebellar nucleus (DCN). Metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 1 (mGluR1) is richly expressed in Purkinje cells (PCs) of the cerebellar cortex. Global mGluR1 knock-out (KO) mice show a significantly lower percentage of conditioned response (CR%) than wild-type mice in eyeblink conditioning, and the impaired CR% is restored by the introduction of mGluR1 in PCs. However, the specific roles of mGluR1 in major memory processes, including formation, storage and expression have not yet been defined. We thus examined the role of mGluR1 in these processes of eyeblink conditioning, using mGluR1 conditional KO (cKO) mice harboring a selective and reversible expression of mGluR1 in PCs. We have found that eyeblink memory is not latently formed in the absence of mGluR1 in adult mouse PCs. However, once acquired, eyeblink memory is expressed even after the depletion of mGluR1 in PCs. We thus conclude that mGluR1 in PCs is indispensable for the formation of eyeblink memory, while it is not required for the expression of CR.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43744-z | DOI Listing |
Brain Res
July 2025
EEIS Laboratory, ENSET of Mohammedia, Hassan II University of Casablanca, Mohammedia, Morocco.
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is neurodegenerative disorder that causes cognitive decline, memory loss, confusion, and changes in behavior. Early and accurate detection is important for timely intervention, current diagnostic methods can be slow, expensive, and have limited sensitivity. Electroencephalography (EEG) offers a simple and non-invasive way to measure brain activity, and it has shown promise in supporting AD diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosystems
August 2025
Department of Evolutionary Æsthetics, Paris 8 Saint-Denis University, Saint-Denis, France. Electronic address:
This article comes back on the hypothesis developed by the evolutionary theory of the sensorimotor paradox that our capacity to produce mental representation could be derived from a dissociation of sensory prediction systems from motor action. As they should be then coordinated together, we are drawing further possible leads regarding the intermediary space between linear mental projections that are not bound and stopped by sensory feedback, and ongoing sensory perception whether large or discrete. Dissociated prediction would be eventually interrupted by sensory input, getting lost, reinitiated and derived onto another prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAPL Bioeng
June 2025
Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a versatile signaling molecule with significant roles in various physiological processes, including synaptic plasticity and memory formation. In the cerebellum, NO is produced by neural NO synthase and diffuses to influence synaptic changes, particularly at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. This study aims to investigate NO's role in cerebellar learning mechanisms using a biologically realistic simulation-based approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
May 2025
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, USA 90095.
Our memories do not simply keep time - they warp it, bending the past to fit the structure of our experiences. For example, people tend to remember items as occurring farther apart in time if they spanned a change in context, or 'event boundary,' compared to the same context. While these distortions can sacrifice precise timing, they may serve to help separate temporally adjacent memories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
May 2025
School of Life Science and Technology & State Key Laboratory of Advanced Medical Materials and Devices, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai 201210, China. Electronic address:
Hippocampal-cortical interaction is crucial for episodic memory encoding and retaining, but when and how this interaction occurs remains elusive. Here, within the trace eyeblink conditioning paradigm, we found a neuronal ensemble in layer II of mouse visual cortex (VIS) that responded to the paired stimulus of light flash (cue, or conditioned stimulus [CS]) and air puff (unconditioned stimulus [US]), but not discrete stimuli, resembling an associative event during learning. This neuronal representation in VIS is dependent on the hippocampus and contributes to encoding the association.
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