The low Tet1 levels could be key to understanding conditions like post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition that's continued to baffle medical researchers. If doctors could find a way to raise those levels in, say, soldiers returning from battle, they might be able to let positive memories erase the trauma. It would actually give the soldiers more agency.
"What happens during memory extinction is not erasure of the original memory," says Li-Huei Tsai, director of MIT’s Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. "The old trace of memory is telling the mice that this place is dangerous. But the new memory informs the mice that this place is actually safe. There are two choices of memory that are competing with each other."
In other words, bringing up Tet1 levels could help a person decide what to remember and what to block out. Turning this research into an actual treatment plan for PTSD patients is probably a few years down the road—after all, the scientists are still testing it out on the mice. But it's exciting that we're learning how to forget. Now if we could only figure out how to remember…
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