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HT Experiment :

Experiment Id  GSE156836 Name  A Thalamic Orphan Receptor Drives Variability in Short Term Memory
Experiment Type  RNA-Seq Study Type  Baseline
Source  GEO Curation Date  2022-03-10
description  Working memory is a form of short-term memory that involves maintaining and updating task relevant information toward goal-directed pursuits. Classical models posit persistent activity in prefrontal cortex (PFC) as a primary neural correlate, but emerging views suggest additional mechanisms may exist. We screened ~200 genetically diverse mice on a working memory task and identified a genetic locus on Chromosome 5 that contributes to a substantial proportion (17%) of the phenotypic variance. Within the locus, we identified a gene encoding an orphan G-protein coupled receptor, Gpr12, which is sufficient to drive substantial and bi-directional changes in working memory. Molecular, cellular, and imaging studies revealed that Gpr12 enables high thalamus-PFC synchrony to support memory maintenance and choice accuracy. These findings identify a novel orphan receptor as a potent modifier of short-term memory, and supplement classical PFC-based models with an emerging thalamus-centric framework for the mechanistic understanding of working memory.  Examination of short term memory using Diversity Outbred mice and interrogation through QTL and RNAseq analysis.
  • variables:
  • anatomical structure,
  • mouse strain,
  • bulk RNA-seq

1 Publications

Trail: HTExperiment

18 Samples

Trail: HTExperiment