9th Nov 2009
It is well known that fear memories are permanent. However, a recent paper in Science, evaluated by three Faculty Members for F1000, reports an extraordinary finding that supports the use of a drug to control recollections of traumatic incidents.
The researchers demonstrated that, in mice, proteins known as extracellular matrix chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans form ‘neural nets’ in the brain that protect against the erasure of memory. They also reported that, when these mice were given a drug called chondroitinase ABC, fear memories were more likely to disappear than for those mice in the control group.
This finding has important therapeutic implications for sufferers of anxiety disorders, as it could allow doctors to erase the memories of patients who have had extremely traumatic experiences, such as survivors of war.
The full text of this article is available free for 90 days at http://www.f1000medicine.com/article/9l8fph1qfd7kctz/id/1165039
David P. Wolfer, Professor at the University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine, Puerto Rico
“The identification of cellular mechanisms that ... control the stability of fear memories is extremely important for the development of new and better therapies for anxiety disorders”.
Gregory Quirk, Associate Professor at the Institute of Anatomy, University of Zürich, Switzerland
“Once we know how perineuronal nets are regulated, it may be possible to ... allow fears in adults to be erased by extinction-based therapies.”
Steve Pogonowski
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