Replay of Episodic Memories in the Rat

Abstract

Vivid episodic memories in people have been characterized as the replay of multiple unique events in sequential order [1–3]. The hippocampus plays a critical role in episodic memories in both people and rodents [2, 4–6]. Although rats remember multiple unique episodes [7, 8], it is currently unknown if animals replay episodic memories. Therefore, we developed an animal model of episodic memory replay. Here we show that rats can remember a trial-unique stream of multiple episodes and the order in which these events occurred by engaging hippocampal-dependent episodic memory replay. We document that rats rely on episodic memory replay to remember the order of events rather than relying on non-episodic memories. Replay of episodic memories survives a long retention-interval challenge and interference from the memory of other events, which documents that replay is part of long-term episodic memory. The chemogenetic activating drug clozapine N-oxide (CNO), but not vehicle, reversibly impairs episodic memory replay in rats previously injected bilaterally in the hippocampus with a recombinant viral vector containing an inhibitory Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by a Designer Drug (DREADD; AAV8-hSyn-hM4Di-mCherry). By contrast, two non-episodic memory assessments are unaffected by CNO, showing selectivity of this hippocampal-dependent impairment. Our approach provides an animal model of episodic memory replay, a process by which the rat searches its representations in episodic memory in sequential order to find information. Our findings using rats suggest that the ability to replay a stream of episodic memories is quite old in the evolutionary timescale.

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Panoz-Brown, Danielle, et al. "Replay of Episodic Memories in the Rat." Current Biology, vol. 28, no. 10, pp. 1628-1634.e7, 2018-05-21, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.006.

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Current Biology

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