Publication | Open Access
Protein Synthesis-Dependent Associative Long-Term Memory in Larval Zebrafish
63
Citations
22
References
2013
Year
Brain MechanismSocial RewardSocial SciencesNeural MechanismMemoryLarval ZebrafishCognitive NeuroscienceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceZebrafish LarvaeNervous SystemNeurobiological MechanismDevelopmental BiologyCellular NeuroscienceComputational NeuroscienceNeural CircuitsNeuroscienceMedicineAnimal Behavior
The larval zebrafish is a model organism to study the neural circuitry underlying behavior. There exist, however, few examples of robust long-term memory. Here we describe a simple, unrestrained associative place-conditioning paradigm. We show that visual access to a group of conspecifics has rewarding properties for 6- to 8-day-old larval zebrafish. We use this social reward as an unconditioned stimulus and pair it with a distinct visual environment. After training, larvae exhibited spatial preference for the location previously paired with the social reward for up to 36 h, indicating that zebrafish larvae can exhibit long-term associative memory. Furthermore, incubation with a protein synthesis inhibitor or an NMDAR-antagonist impaired memory. In future experiments, this learning paradigm could be used to study the social interactions of larval zebrafish or paired with cell-specific metabolic labeling to visualize circuits underlying memory formation.
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