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Damage of GABAergic neurons in the medial septum impairs spatial working memory and extinction of active avoidance: Effects on proactive interference

✍ Scribed by Kevin C.H. Pang; Xilu Jiao; Swamini Sinha; Kevin D. Beck; Richard J. Servatius


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
540 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1050-9631

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The medial septum and diagonal band (MSDB) are important in spatial learning and memory. On the basis of the excitotoxic damage of GABAergic MSDB neurons, we have recently suggested a role for these neurons in controlling proactive interference. Our study sought to test this hypothesis in different behavioral procedures using a new GABAergic immunotoxin. GABA‐transporter‐saporin (GAT1‐SAP) was administered into the MSDB of male Sprague–Dawley rats. Following surgery, rats were trained in a reference memory water maze procedure for 5 days, followed by a working memory (delayed match to position) water maze procedure. Other rats were trained in a lever‐press avoidance procedure after intraseptal GAT1‐SAP or sham surgery. Intraseptal GAT1‐SAP extensively damaged GABAergic neurons while sparing most cholinergic MSDB neurons. Rats treated with GAT1‐SAP were not impaired in acquiring a spatial reference memory, learning the location of the escape platform as rapidly as sham rats. In contrast, GAT1‐SAP rats were slower than sham rats to learn the platform location in a delayed match to position procedure, in which the platform location was changed every day. Moreover, GAT1‐SAP rats returned to previous platform locations more often than sham rats. In the active avoidance procedure, intraseptal GAT1‐SAP impaired extinction but not acquisition of the avoidance response. Using a different neurotoxin and behavioral procedures than previous studies, the results of this study paint a similar picture that GABAergic MSDB neurons are important for controlling proactive interference. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.