Author
Listed:
- Andrea Muñoz Zamora
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin)
- Aaron Douglas
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin)
- Paul B. Conway
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin)
- Esteban Urrieta
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin)
- Taylor Moniz
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin
Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC))
- James D. O’Leary
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin)
- Lydia Marks
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin
Allen Institute)
- Christine A. Denny
(Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC)
Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene (RFMH)
New York State Psychiatric Institute)
- Clara Ortega-de San Luis
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin
University of Jaén)
- Lydia Lynch
(Trinity College Dublin
Harvard Medical School
Princeton University
Princeton University)
- Tomás J. Ryan
(Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin
University of Melbourne
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR))
Abstract
Environmental thermal challenges trigger the brain to coordinate both autonomic and behavioural responses to maintain optimal body temperature1–4. It is unknown how temperature information is precisely stored and retrieved in the brain and how it is converted into a physiological response. Here we investigated whether memories could control whole-body metabolism by training mice to remember a thermal challenge. Mice were conditioned to associate a context with a specific temperature by combining thermoregulatory Pavlovian conditioning with engram-labelling technology, optogenetics and chemogenetics. We report that if mice are returned to an environment in which they previously experienced a 4 °C cold challenge, they increase their metabolic rates regardless of the actual environmental temperature. Furthermore, we show that mice have increased hypothalamic activity when they are exposed to the cold, and that a specific network emerges between the hippocampus and the hypothalamus during the recall of a cold memory. Both natural retrieval and artificial reactivation of cold-sensitive memory engrams in the hippocampus mimic the physiological responses that are seen during a cold challenge. These ensembles are necessary for cold-memory retrieval. These findings show that retrieval of a cold memory causes whole-body autonomic and behavioural responses that enable mice to maintain thermal homeostasis.
Suggested Citation
Andrea Muñoz Zamora & Aaron Douglas & Paul B. Conway & Esteban Urrieta & Taylor Moniz & James D. O’Leary & Lydia Marks & Christine A. Denny & Clara Ortega-de San Luis & Lydia Lynch & Tomás J. Ryan, 2025.
"Cold memories control whole-body thermoregulatory responses,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 641(8064), pages 942-951, May.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:641:y:2025:i:8064:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08902-6
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08902-6
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