Publication | Open Access
Prior experience conditionally inhibits the expression of new learning in Drosophila
35
Citations
85
References
2021
Year
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceAffective NeuroscienceCognitionPrior ExperienceSocial SciencesMemoryPrior Odor ExposureCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceDevelopmental GeneticsMorphogenesisNervous SystemOdor Pre-exposure MemoryNeurobiological MechanismDevelopmental BiologyLatent InhibitionEvolutionary Developmental BiologyAssociative Memory (Psychology)NeuroscienceMedicine
Prior experience of a stimulus can inhibit subsequent acquisition or expression of a learned association of that stimulus. However, the neuronal manifestations of this learning effect, named latent inhibition (LI), are poorly understood. Here, we show that prior odor exposure can produce context-dependent LI of later appetitive olfactory memory performance in Drosophila. Odor pre-exposure forms a short-lived aversive memory whose lone expression lacks context-dependence. Acquisition of odor pre-exposure memory requires aversively reinforcing dopaminergic neurons that innervate two mushroom body compartments-one group of which exhibits increasing activity with successive odor experience. Odor-specific responses of the corresponding mushroom body output neurons are suppressed, and their output is necessary for expression of both pre-exposure memory and LI of appetitive memory. Therefore, odor pre-exposure attaches negative valence to the odor itself, and LI of appetitive memory results from a temporary and context-dependent retrieval deficit imposed by competition with the parallel short-lived aversive memory.
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