Unilateral blockade of the dorsal hippocampus by tetrodotoxin makes it possible to form lateralized spatial memories, which rapidly transfer to the naive hippocampus when training continues with intact brain. Unilateral X-ray irradiation of newborn rats causes irreversible destruction of granule cel
Hippocampus and remote spatial memory in rats
✍ Scribed by Robert E. Clark; Nicola J. Broadbent; Larry R. Squire
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 334 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1050-9631
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Damage to the hippocampus typically produces temporally graded retrograde amnesia, whereby memories acquired recently are impaired more than memories acquired remotely. This phenomenon has been demonstrated repeatedly in a variety of species and tasks. It has also figured prominently in theoretical treatments of memory and hippocampal function. Yet temporally graded retrograde amnesia has not been demonstrated following hippocampal damage in spatial tasks like the water maze. We have assessed recent and remote spatial memory following hippocampal lesions in three different tests of spatial memory: (1) the standard water maze; (2) the Oasis maze, a dry‐land version of the water maze; and (3) the annular water maze, where training and testing occur within a circular corridor. Training protocols were developed for each task such that retention of spatial memory could be expressed after very long retention intervals. In addition, retention in each task was assessed with single probe trials so that the assessment of remote memory did not depend on the ability to relearn across multiple trials. The findings were consistent across the three tasks. In the standard water maze (Experiment 1), spatial memory was impaired after training–surgery intervals of 1 day, 8 weeks, or 14 weeks. Similarly, in the Oasis maze (Experiment 2), spatial memory was impaired after training–surgery intervals of 1 day and 9 weeks. Finally, in the annular water maze (Experiment 3), spatial memory was impaired after training–surgery intervals of 9 weeks and 14 weeks. Dorsal hippocampal lesions impaired performance to the same extent as complete lesions. The impairment in remote spatial memory could reflect disruption of previously acquired spatial information. Alternatively, it is possible that in these tasks hippocampal lesions might produce an impairment in performance that prevents the expression of an otherwise intact spatial memory. Published 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Using two different mRNA synthesis inhibitors, we show that blockade of hippocampal gene expression during restricted posttraining or postretrieval time windows hinders retention of long‐term spatial memory for the Morris water maze task, without affecting short‐term memory, nonspatial
## Abstract A non‐navigational test of incidental spatial learning was used to determine whether hippocampal damage causes temporally‐graded retrograde amnesia (TGRA) for allocentric‐spatial information. Rats were exposed to two identical objects in a circular open field for 7 min on seven consecut
The existence in a population of aging rats of classes that display a different performance in the Morris water-maze test was investigated by cluster analysis procedure. These classes identified at 18 months of age showed a different response to levocarnitine acetyl and had a different behavioral pr
Small-conductance calcium-activated potassium channels (K Ca 2) are essential components involved in the modulation of neuronal excitability, underlying learning and memory. Recent evidence suggests that K Ca 2 channel activity reduces synaptic transmission in a postsynaptic NMDA receptor-dependent