Making Long-Term Memories Requires Nerve-Cell Damage

Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine found that a stimulus sets off a cycle of DNA damage and repair within certain hippocampal neurons that leads to stable memory assemblies—clusters of brain cells that represent our past experiences.

This image shows fragments released from the nuclei of neurons undergoing DNA damage during learning: DNA (large white dot at center right), histones (purple) and transcription factors (red and green). Credit: Radulovic lab

This image shows fragments released from the nuclei of neurons undergoing DNA damage during learning: DNA (large white dot at center right), histones (purple) and transcription factors (red and green). Credit: Radulovic lab

Jelena Radulovic, MD, PhD
Jelena Radulovic, MD, PhD