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Laser creates 'false memories' in fly brains

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Gero Miesenböck at the University of Oxford and his colleagues .

This allowed them to "memories" into the . " of the flies' behaviour," says Miesenböck.

It is known that the release of dopamine by neurons in the "" – . But it was not known whether behaviour , without the fly having any .

To investigate, Miesenböck and his colleagues started by putting ordinary fruit flies while two different odours were pumped in from either end to create two separate odour streams.

The researchers delivered an electric shock each time a fly strayed into a particular odour stream, which taught the flies to prefer the other one: the flies learned to move in the direction of the shock-related odour 30 per cent less often.

Once he had shown that the flies had , Miesenböck decided to see if similar conditioning the flies.

His team started by genetically engineering a second set of fruit flies so that their a membrane protein called P2X2. When P2X2 binds to a molecule called ATP, the neuron that produced it fires as if zapped by an electric shock.

The team then made these neurons by with a form of ATP that . By injecting the light-sensitive ATP into different neurons in different flies, they were able to produce flies with .

The researchers then put these genetically modified flies into the smell chamber. , when the flies strayed into a particular odour stream, the researchers flashed them with a laser beam instead of zapping them with an electric shock as they had with the normal flies.

Many of the flies did not react. But flies that had 12 particular light-sensitive neurons chose to move in the direction of the laser-related odour 28 per cent less of the time – as in the unmodified flies that were .

Miesenböck concludes that in these 12 neurons has the same effect as applying electric shocks to flies. In other words, these flies feared that smell as if they had been conditioned to associate an electric shock with it. "Stimulating just these neurons gives the flies a memory of an unpleasant event that never happened," he says.

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He says that . "I would be surprised if the way humans learn from mistakes turned out to be fundamentally different from the way flies learn from mistakes."

"The scientists have identified a discrete population of nerve cells that are seemingly the source of 'memory'," adds Richard Baines, a neuroscientist based at the University of Manchester, UK. "This represents a further demonstration of the power of using organisms like the fruit fly for understanding how the human brain works."

However, Wayne Sossin, who studies the biochemical pathways of memory formation at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital – part of McGill University, Canada – points out that it will be difficult to show that human memories work in the same way. "," he says.

He also says that , . "This is an inherently very neat experiment, but further research is needed in some areas," he says. "They showed that activation of a small subset of neurons is , but they didn't show that these neurons are actually ."

He thinks that Miesenböck's team should also have looked at , which may form via separate .

The next step is to identify the "upstream" cells that control the activity of these 12 neurons, says Miesenböck. He says this will "" to the sites where the flies' .

Journal references: Neuron, vol 33, p 15; Cell, DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2009.08.034

by Shanta Barley

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn17990-laser-creates-false-memories-in-fly-brains.html

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