Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly

Memory is mainly understood as the recollection of past events. The human brain and its simplest unit, the synapse, belong to the places in which such memories are physically stored. From an experimental point of view, memory can be tested in humans by recall. However, in other organisms, memory is...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fabrice Caudron, Yves Barra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shared Science Publishers OG 2015-02-01
Series:Microbial Cell
Subjects:
Online Access:http://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/mnemons-encoding-memory-by-protein-super-assembly/
id doaj-27318185d6d6453a9154a879058b83a2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-27318185d6d6453a9154a879058b83a22020-11-24T23:55:36ZengShared Science Publishers OGMicrobial Cell2311-26382015-02-011310010210.15698/mic2014.01.134Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assemblyFabrice Caudron0Yves Barra1Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Biology, ETH Zurich, Otto-Stern-Weg 3, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland.Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Biology, ETH Zurich, Otto-Stern-Weg 3, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland.Memory is mainly understood as the recollection of past events. The human brain and its simplest unit, the synapse, belong to the places in which such memories are physically stored. From an experimental point of view, memory can be tested in humans by recall. However, in other organisms, memory is reflected in its use by individuals to learn about and adapt their behavior to their environment. Under this criterion, even unicellular organisms are able to learn from their environments and show the ability to adapt their responses to repeating stimuli. This indicates that they are able to keep track of their histories and use these traces to elaborate adapted responses, making these traces akin to memory encodings. Understanding these phenomena may even help us to dissect part of the rather complex molecular orchestration happening in our synapses. When exposed unsuccessfully to mating pheromone, i.e. when mating does not happen, budding yeast cells become refractory to the mating signal. This refractory state is restricted to the mother cell and not inherited by the daughter cells, even though it is stable for most if not the entire life span of the mother cell. Interestingly, both stability and asymmetric segregation of the acquired state are explained by the molecular mechanism underlying its establishment, which shows important analogies and distinctions to prions. Here we discuss these similarities and differenceshttp://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/mnemons-encoding-memory-by-protein-super-assembly/mnemonsmemorypheromone responseWhi3super-assembliesbudding yeast
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabrice Caudron
Yves Barra
spellingShingle Fabrice Caudron
Yves Barra
Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
Microbial Cell
mnemons
memory
pheromone response
Whi3
super-assemblies
budding yeast
author_facet Fabrice Caudron
Yves Barra
author_sort Fabrice Caudron
title Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
title_short Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
title_full Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
title_fullStr Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
title_full_unstemmed Mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
title_sort mnemons: encoding memory by protein super-assembly
publisher Shared Science Publishers OG
series Microbial Cell
issn 2311-2638
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Memory is mainly understood as the recollection of past events. The human brain and its simplest unit, the synapse, belong to the places in which such memories are physically stored. From an experimental point of view, memory can be tested in humans by recall. However, in other organisms, memory is reflected in its use by individuals to learn about and adapt their behavior to their environment. Under this criterion, even unicellular organisms are able to learn from their environments and show the ability to adapt their responses to repeating stimuli. This indicates that they are able to keep track of their histories and use these traces to elaborate adapted responses, making these traces akin to memory encodings. Understanding these phenomena may even help us to dissect part of the rather complex molecular orchestration happening in our synapses. When exposed unsuccessfully to mating pheromone, i.e. when mating does not happen, budding yeast cells become refractory to the mating signal. This refractory state is restricted to the mother cell and not inherited by the daughter cells, even though it is stable for most if not the entire life span of the mother cell. Interestingly, both stability and asymmetric segregation of the acquired state are explained by the molecular mechanism underlying its establishment, which shows important analogies and distinctions to prions. Here we discuss these similarities and differences
topic mnemons
memory
pheromone response
Whi3
super-assemblies
budding yeast
url http://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/mnemons-encoding-memory-by-protein-super-assembly/
work_keys_str_mv AT fabricecaudron mnemonsencodingmemorybyproteinsuperassembly
AT yvesbarra mnemonsencodingmemorybyproteinsuperassembly
_version_ 1725461608951447552