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Interaction between reconsolidation and extinction of fear memory.

Brain Research Bulletin 2023 Februrary 17
Memory retrieval is not a passive process. When a memory is retrieved, it returns to a labile state and undergoes reconsolidation to be re-stored. The discovery of this memory reconsolidation has had a major impact on memory consolidation theory. In other words, it suggested that memory is more dynamic than expected and can be modified through reconsolidation. Conversely, a conditioned fear memory undergoes memory extinction after retrieval, and it is thought that extinction does not reflect its erasure, but rather new inhibitory learning of the original conditioned memory. We have investigated the relationship between memory reconsolidation and extinction by comparing their behavioral, cellular, and molecular mechanisms. Memory reconsolidation and extinction have opposite functions on contextual fear and inhibitory avoidance memories; reconsolidation maintains or strengthens fear memory, whereas extinction weakens it. Importantly, reconsolidation and extinction are contrasting memory processes not only at the behavioral level but also at cellular and molecular levels. Furthermore, our analysis revealed that reconsolidation and extinction are not independent processes, but interact with each other. Interestingly, we also found a "memory transition process" that switches the fear memory process from reconsolidation to extinction after retrieval. Investigating the mechanisms of reconsolidation and extinction will contribute to our understanding of the dynamic nature of memory.

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