TY - JOUR
T1 - Lateralized fascia dentata lesion and blockade of one hippocampus
T2 - Effect on spatial memory in rats
AU - Czéh, Boldizsár
AU - Seress, László
AU - Nadel, Lynn
AU - Bures, Jan
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Unilateral blockade of the dorsal hippocampus by tetrodetoxin makes it possible to form lateralized spatial memories, which rapidly transfer to the naive hippocampus when training continues with intact brain. Unilateral X-ray irradiation of newborn rats causes irreversible destruction of granule cells in the ipsilateral fascia dentata (FD). Possible compensation of poor learning in the lesioned hemisphere by commissural transfer of memories from the intact hippocampus was examined in seven rats with unilateral FD lesion, which were first trained in the Morris water maze to asymptotic performance (mean escape latency 6 ± 1 s). Subsequent testing during functional ablation either of the intact or of the lesioned hippocampus by tetrodotoxin revealed escape latencies 35 ± 8 s or 8 ± 1 s, respectively. Probe trial tests during inactivation of the intact and lesioned hippocampus showed target quadrant preference of 32 ± 2% or 54 ± 3%, respectively. The results indicate: (a) that one intact hippocampus alone can support the water maze task, (b) that no, or only a very weak, memory trace is available in the lesioned hippocampus. It is concluded that the above results are due to the inability of the FD lesioned hippocampus to process the information received from the ipsilateral entorhinal cortex.
AB - Unilateral blockade of the dorsal hippocampus by tetrodetoxin makes it possible to form lateralized spatial memories, which rapidly transfer to the naive hippocampus when training continues with intact brain. Unilateral X-ray irradiation of newborn rats causes irreversible destruction of granule cells in the ipsilateral fascia dentata (FD). Possible compensation of poor learning in the lesioned hemisphere by commissural transfer of memories from the intact hippocampus was examined in seven rats with unilateral FD lesion, which were first trained in the Morris water maze to asymptotic performance (mean escape latency 6 ± 1 s). Subsequent testing during functional ablation either of the intact or of the lesioned hippocampus by tetrodotoxin revealed escape latencies 35 ± 8 s or 8 ± 1 s, respectively. Probe trial tests during inactivation of the intact and lesioned hippocampus showed target quadrant preference of 32 ± 2% or 54 ± 3%, respectively. The results indicate: (a) that one intact hippocampus alone can support the water maze task, (b) that no, or only a very weak, memory trace is available in the lesioned hippocampus. It is concluded that the above results are due to the inability of the FD lesioned hippocampus to process the information received from the ipsilateral entorhinal cortex.
KW - Interhemispheric transfer
KW - Neonatal X-irradiation
KW - Tetrodotoxin
KW - Water maze
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U2 - 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1063(1998)8:6<647::AID-HIPO7>3.0.CO;2-L
DO - 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1063(1998)8:6<647::AID-HIPO7>3.0.CO;2-L
M3 - Article
C2 - 9882022
AN - SCOPUS:0032405554
SN - 1050-9631
VL - 8
SP - 647
EP - 650
JO - Hippocampus
JF - Hippocampus
IS - 6
ER -