The anterior insular cortex processes social recognition memory

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作者
Ji-You Min
Sanggeon Park
Jeiwon Cho
Yeowool Huh
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[1] Ewha Womans University,Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Scranton College
[2] Ewha Womans University,Brain Disease Research Institute, Ewha Brain Institute
[3] Catholic Kwandong University,Department of Medical Science, College of Medicine
[4] Catholic Kwandong University,Translational Brain Research Center, International St. Mary’s Hospital
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Impaired social abilities are characteristics of a variety of psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, and bipolar disorder. Studies consistently implicated the relationship between the anterior insular cortex (aIC) and social ability, however, how the aIC involves in processing specific subtypes of social ability was uninvestigated. We, therefore, investigated whether the absence or presence of the aIC affects the social behaviors of mice. We found that electrolytic lesions of the aIC specifically impaired mice’s ability to recognize a novel stranger mouse, while the sociability of the aIC-lesioned mice was intact. Interestingly, the aIC-lesioned mice were still distinguished between a mouse that had been housed together before the aIC lesion and a novel mouse, supporting that retrieval of social recognition memory may not involve the aIC. Additional behavioral tests revealed that this specific social ability impairment induced by the aIC lesion was not due to impairment in olfaction, learning and memory, locomotion, or anxiety levels. Together our data suggest that the aIC is specifically involved in processing social recognition memory, but not necessarily involved in retrieving it.
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