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Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 96-103, March/April 2001
1 Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven,
Connecticut 06520-8025, USA; 2 Department of Science and
Biomedical Technology, Laboratory of Human Physiology, School of
Medicine, University of L'Aquila
The effect of post-training intradorsal striatal infusion of
metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) drugs on memory consolidation processes in an inhibitory avoidance (IA) task and visible/hidden platform water maze tasks was examined. In the IA task, adult male
Long-Evans rats received post-training intracaudate infusions of the
broad spectrum mGluR antagonist
-methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine (MCPG; 1.0, 2.0 mM/0.5 µL), the group I/II mGluR agonist
1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-carboxylic acid (ACPD; 0.5 or 1.0 µM/0.5
µL), or saline immediately following footshock training, and
retention was tested 24 h later. In the visible- and hidden-platform
water maze tasks, rats received post-training intracaudate infusions of
ACPD (1.0 µM), MCPG (2.0 mM), or saline immediately following an
eight-trial training session, followed by a retention test 24 h later.
In the IA task, post-training infusion of ACPD (0.5 and 1.0 µM) or
MCPG (1.0 and 2.0 mM) impaired retention. In the IA and
visible-platform water maze tasks, post-training infusion of ACPD (1.0 µM), or MCPG (2.0 mM) impaired retention. In contrast, neither drug
affected retention when administered post-training in the
hidden-platform task, consistent with the hypothesized role of the
dorsal striatum in stimulus-response habit formation. When intradorsal
striatal injections were delayed 2 h post-training in the
visible-platform water maze task, neither drug affected retention,
indicating a time-dependent effect of the immediate post-training
injections on memory consolidation. It is hypothesized that MCPG
impaired memory via a blockade of postsynaptic dorsal striatal
mGluR's, while the impairing effect of ACPD may have been caused by an
influence of this agonist on presynaptic "autoreceptor" striatal
mGluR populations.
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