Experimentally naive rats can learn rapidly to discriminate among three odors to obtain food reinforcement. After three massed trials, they show almost errorless performance. This task has proved to be useful in studying time-dependent postacquisition intracellular processes necessary for long- term memory. The present experiments evaluated the temporal dynamics of the role of β-noradrenergic receptors in long-term consolidation. Rats were implanted with intracerebroventricular cannulae and trained in a single session to find reinforcement in a hole in a sponge impregnated with a particular odor. Injections of the β-receptor antagonist timolol were made at 5 min, 1, 2, or 5 hr after training. Memory and relearning ability were evaluated 48 hr later. Rats treated with timolol 2 hr after training showed a memory deficit at the retention test, but were able to relearn the task normally. Injections at the earlier or later time points were ineffective. The results reinforce previous observations with systemic injections that β- noradrenergic receptors are involved in the late phase of memory consolidation and suggest a critical time window during which they are necessary. The time window is compatible with the current view that long- term memory depends on late involvement of the cAMP cascade leading to new protein synthesis necessary for synaptic reorganization.
CITATION STYLE
Sara, S. J., Roullet, P., & Przybyslawski, J. (1999). Consolidation of memory for odor-reward association: β-Adrenergic receptor involvement in the late phase. Learning and Memory, 6(2), 88–96. https://doi.org/10.1101/lm.6.2.88
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