Keywords: Neurodegeneration, AgingMemory consolidation, the ability to transform newly learned information into long-term memory, declines with age. Our previous study revealed targeted neuromodulation of spindle activities can arrest memory consolidation dysfunction in aging brains through strengthening multi-target memory representations. However, whether and how spindle activities influence memory consolidation via acting on inter-regional information integration remained unclear. Here, we demonstrate in aging animals that optogenetically-evoked spindle activities alleviate memory consolidation dysfunction through modulating brain-wide inter-regional connectivity and regional genetic expression. Our work provides an approach combining fMRI analysis and genetic expression profiling to bridge systems- and molecular-level understandings of memory consolidation.
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