Consolidation of memory after its reactivation: Involvement of β noradrenergic receptors in the late phase

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Abstract

Evidence is growing that the cAMP pathway through the cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB) transcription factor plays an important role in long-term memory formation (LTM). To study the role of β-noradrenergic receptors, positively linked to the cAMP second-messenger system, in the dynamics of LTM processes, we used a memory-reactivation paradigm because recent studies in our laboratory confirmed that reactivated memory is labile and undergoes an extended reconsolidation process. In an eight-arm maze, rats were trained to choose the same three baited arms; 24 hr later, memory was reactivated and then the rats were injected intracerebroventricularly at 5 min, 30 min, 60 min, or 5 hr later with the β-antagonist timolol or with saline. The results showed that injection of timolol induced amnesia only at the 60 min post-reactivation interval, whereas all control groups and groups that were timolol-injected at other post-reactivation intervals displayed optimal retention. The delayed amnesic action of timolol suggests that β noradrenergic receptors and the cAMP cascade are implicated in the late phase of reprocessing of a remembered event.

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Roullet, P., & Sara, S. (1998). Consolidation of memory after its reactivation: Involvement of β noradrenergic receptors in the late phase. In Neural Plasticity (Vol. 6, pp. 63–68). Hindawi Publishing Corporation. https://doi.org/10.1155/NP.1998.63

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