People of all ages have moments when it feels like we’re on the edge of recalling something but can’t quite do it—where we parked our car or left our phone, for example, or what name goes with that familiar face. It’s extremely frustrating in the moment, but for most of us, we can usually remember if we try. For patients with Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and many other dementia-causing diseases, however, memory loss is much more profound.
Given the steady rise in the numbers of Alzheimer’s patients, in particular, the research community and pharmaceutical companies agree that the development of treatment strategies is critical, now more than ever. Yet despite decades of research, we are still trying to understand why these patients can’t remember—and trying to find some way we might be able to help.
But we may be closer to an answer.
A well-known feature of early Alzheimer’s is a difficulty remembering recent events. We’ve always assumed that there are two possible explanations: one is that these patients can’t store new information properly in the brain; the other is that their ability to recall stored information has been weakened. But maybe there’s another way to think about it. Consider a public library in which each book represents a memory. If the library doesn’t have the book you want, you’re out of luck. This would be like asking Alzheimer’s patients to remember something that hasn’t been stored in their brain in the first place.
Even if the library has the book, though, you still need several pieces of information to locate it—what floor it’s on, what rack, what row on the rack. If you were missing some of that information, you wouldn’t find it either. That corresponds to the second assumption about why people with Alzheimer’s can’t remember. Although most research has focused on ways of improving memory storage in Alzheimer’s, this has not led to led to treatments capable of improving recall.
On the other hand, scientific evidence in support of the “weakened memory recall” idea in Alzheimer’s has been difficult to obtain, which is why this possibility has received considerably less attention. But in a Nature paper published in 2016, our team investigated both memory storage and memory recall processes in an animal model of early Alzheimer’s disease. In clinical research, there is no simple method to distinguish between memory storage versus recall deficits in Alzheimer’s patients, because standard cognitive tests rely on the patient’s ability to verbally describe previous events.
To circumvent this issue, I developed an approach that allowed us to activate the neurons that store memory information, referred to as memory engrams, through optogenetics—that is, introducing a gene that is light sensitive into the memory engram cells of “Alzheimer's” mice, then delivering blue light pulses to activate them—and measuring memory recall strength directly. To our surprise, we found comparable numbers of engram cells in normal healthy animals and Alzheimer’s animals, suggesting that the initial memory storage process is intact. Targeting the recall process in Alzheimer’s animals led to an improvement in their memory, which reached the performance level of normal animals.
This was the very first time that I started to believe in the “weakened memory recall” idea for Alzheimer’s disease. What convinced me further was the discovery that a similar “memory recall” problem existed in another animal model of amnesia, which I published a year later in PNAS. Together, these studies suggested that “weakened memory recall” might not only be applicable to early Alzheimer’s but potentially to other human diseases that also affect our memories.
In terms of the library, targeting recall in Alzheimer’s improves memory by obtaining all necessary information to locate the book of interest. While this is one way to think about the issue at hand, another research group recently provided a different explanation. By building on my initial “weakened memory recall” discovery, they found that in the brains of Alzheimer’s animals there is some noise disturbing the recall process, which makes it hard to locate the book/memory.
This is like trying to find stars in the sky on a cloudy night. By targeting recall processes, we find that what is happening in the brain of Alzheimer’s animals is that the clouds are being moved away, making room for the bright stars. In this explanation, patients may even have all the information—that is, the context in which the memory was originally formed—to “find a book in the library.” They just cannot access this information clearly.
Which one of these explanations more accurately describe Alzheimer’s memory symptoms is a topic for additional research, but what’s clear is that we need to take advantage of targeting recall to help treat patients in the near future. My own current research aims to modify methods that are already used in patients, like deep-brain stimulation or genetic interventions, to improve memory recall in Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia.
Another approach that is worth pursuing is to search for brain regions that could be used to boost memory recall processes artificially—and I have already found one exciting candidate. I hope to leverage this knowledge along with other neuroscientists, doctors, and psychologists to work towards a future with treatment options for any of us that have dementia-like symptoms.
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October 19, 2020 at 06:01PM
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Helping Alzheimer's Patients Bring Back Memories - Scientific American
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