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  • 1
    ISSN: 1460-9568
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The contribution of the nucleus accumbens shell, the dorsal hippocampus, and the basolateral amygdala to contextual and explicit cue fear conditioning was assessed in C57BL/6 (C57) and DBA/2 (DBA) mice showing differences in processing contextual information associated with consistent but non-pathological variations in hippocampal functionality. Mice from both strains with bilateral ibotenic acid or sham lesions located in each area were introduced in a conditioning chamber and exposed twice to the pairing of a tone (2 × 8 s, 2000 Hz, 80 dB) with a shock (2 s, 0.7 mA). On the following day, mice were first exposed to the training context then to the tone in a different context. Freezing behaviour was scored in all situations. C57 showed more freezing to the context than to the tone whereas DBA showed more freezing to the tone than to the context. In C57, both nucleus accumbens and hippocampal lesions impaired acquisition of contextual fear conditioning but paradoxically improved acquisition of cue fear conditioning, whereas amygdala lesions disrupted performance in every task. In DBA, nucleus accumbens lesions, like amygdala lesions, impaired acquisition of both contextual and cue fear conditioning, whereas hippocampal lesions did not produce any effect. The parallelism between the effect of nucleus accumbens and hippocampus lesions in C57, and between the effect of nucleus accumbens and amygdala lesions in DBA points to a variability in nucleus accumbens function according to the strain specialization to develop context- or cue-based responding.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Key words Locomotor activity ; Habituation ; Spatial novelty ; Object novelty ; Nucleus accumbens ; AP-5 ; MK-801
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate the role played by intra-accumbens N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in spatial information encoding. For this purpose, the effect of local administration of both competitive (AP-5) and non-competitive (MK-801) NMDA antagonists was assessed in a task designed to estimate the ability of rodents to encode spatial relationships between discrete stimuli. The task consists of placing mice in an open field containing five objects and, after three sessions of habituation, examining their reactivity to object displacement (spatial novelty) and object substitution (object novelty). The results show that both doses of MK-801 (0.15 and 0.3 μg/side) induced a selective impairment in the capability of mice to detect spatial novelty. A similar effect was obtained by injecting the low dose of the competitive antagonist AP-5 (0.1 μg/side), whereas the high dose (0.15 μg/side) abolished detection of both spatial and object novelty. Taken together, these results show that intra-accumbens injections of low doses of competitive and non-competitive NMDA antagonists can produce selective deficits in processing spatial information resembling those observed after hippocampal damage. Moreover, the fact that pharmacological treatments spare memory processes involved in habituation suggests that NMDA antagonists may interfere with the formation of spatial representations rather than producing memory deficits per se.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: C57BL/6 ; DBA/2 ; spatial learning ; contextual information processing
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract These experiments examine the influence of context manipulations on radial maze performance in C57BL/6 (C57) and DBA/2 (DBA) mice. Animals from each strain were trained in two distinct contexts—poor cuing vs rich cuing—that were sucessively switched. The results first show that C57 performed better when trained under rich cuing conditions than under poor ones, whereas DBA performed poorly under both conditions. In addition, contextual manipulations were found to produce more drastic effects in C57 than in DBA mice. That is, C57 showed a strong performance decrement following each context shift, whereas DBA mice did not. In particular, the fact that DBA mice performed similarly under rich and poor cuing conditions and also reacted mildly—or did not react—to context shifts suggests a deficit in processing contextual information, which places important constraints on their capability to form spatial representations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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