Novelty-induced enhancement of memory retention, is now an established phenomenon (Takeuchi et al., Nature, 2016), but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain to be elucidated.
[1] in order to investigate this subject in further detail, we now have the behavioral setup including the hippocampus-dependent object dislocation task and everyday memory task in rats to investigate this subject in further detail. Further, [2] we have an advanced fiber photometry setup, where we are able to detect novelty-induced dopamine release in the hippocampus. That is achieved by using a genetically encoded fluorescent sensor (Nakamoto et al., bioRxiv, 2020) in free-moving rats. Finally, [3] we are trying to identify key proteins critical for novelty-induced enhancement of memory retention in the hippocampal neurons. The theory behind this approach is the synaptic tagging and capture hypothesis (Frey and Morris, Nature, 1997; Okuda et al., European J Neurosci, 2020). Identification of proteins that enhance memory retention will have the potential to reveal new drug targets for treatment of lost memory function.