Title of article :
Modulation of hippocampal NCAM polysialylation and spatial memory consolidation by fear conditioning
Author/Authors :
Carmen Sandi، نويسنده , , José J. Merino، نويسنده , , M. Isabel Cordero، نويسنده , , Nyika D. Kruyt، نويسنده , , Keith J. Murphy، نويسنده , , Ciaran M. Regan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Background
Cell adhesion molecule function is involved in hippocampal synaptic plasticity and associated with memory consolidation. At the infragranular zone of the dentate gyrus, neurons expressing the polysialylated form of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM PSA) transiently increase their frequency 12 hours after training in different tasks.
Methods
Using immunohistochemical procedures, we investigated NCAM polysialylation following training in a contextual fear conditioning paradigm that employed increasing shock intensities to separately model stressful and traumatic experiences in adult male Wistar rats.
Results
Fear conditioning with a stressful .4-mA stimulus resulted in an increased frequency of dentate polysialylated neurons, the magnitude of which was indistinguishable from that observed following water maze training. By contrast, training with a traumatic 1-mA stimulus resulted in a significant decrease in the frequency of polysialylated neurons at the 12 hours posttraining time. Whereas sequential training in the water maze paradigm followed by fear conditioning resulted in potentiated consolidation of spatial information when conditioning involved a .4-mA stimulus, amnesia for spatial learning occurred when conditioning was performed with a 1-mA stimulus.
Conclusions
These results suggest traumatic fear conditioning suppresses NCAM-PSA–mediated plasticity and the concomitant inability to store the trace of recently acquired information.
Keywords :
Hippocampus , Contextual fear conditioning , Rat , Emotional memory , Traumatic memory , cell adhesionmolecules
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry