1. Intact neurobehavioral development and dramatic impairments of procedural-like memory following neonatal ventral hippocampal lesion in rats
- Author
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Anett Schumacher, Brigitte Samama, M.-J. Angst, Maria-Cristina Antal, Brigitte Cosquer, Lucas Lecourtier, Jean-Christophe Cassel, Astrid Nehlig, Estelle Koning, Arielle Ferrandon, Laboratoire de neurosciences cognitives et adaptatives (LNCA), and Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
Male ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Hyperkinesis ,Hippocampal formation ,Hippocampus ,Procedural memory ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Latent inhibition ,medicine ,Animals ,Amphetamine ,Prepulse inhibition ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,030304 developmental biology ,Memory Disorders ,0303 health sciences ,Behavior, Animal ,General Neuroscience ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Denervation ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Animals, Newborn ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Implicit memory ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Neonatal ventral hippocampal lesions (NVHL) in rats are considered a potent developmental model of schizophrenia. After NVHL, rats appear normal during their preadolescent time, whereas in early adulthood, they develop behavioral deficits paralleling symptomatic aspects of schizophrenia, including hyperactivity, hypersensitivity to amphetamine (AMPH), prepulse and latent inhibition deficits, reduced social interactions, and spatial working and reference memory alterations. Surprisingly, the question of the consequences of NVHL on postnatal neurobehavioral development has not been addressed. This is of particular importance, as a defective neurobehavioral development could contribute to impairments seen in adult rats. Therefore, at several time points of the early postsurgical life of NVHL rats, we assessed behaviors accounting for neurobehavioral development, including negative geotaxis and grip strength (PD11), locomotor coordination (PD21), and open-field (PD25). At adulthood, the rats were tested for anxiety levels, locomotor activity, as well as spatial reference memory performance. Using a novel task, we also investigated the consequences of the lesions on procedural-like memory, which had never been tested following NVHL. Our results point to preserved neurobehavioral development. They also confirm the already documented locomotor hyperactivity, spatial reference memory impairment, and hyperresponsiveness to AMPH. Finally, our rseults show for the first time that NVHL disabled the development of behavioral routines, suggesting dramatic procedural memory deficits. The presence of procedural memory deficits in adult rats subjected to NHVL suggests that the lesions lead to a wider range of cognitive deficits than previously shown. Interestingly, procedural or implicit memory impairments have also been reported in schizophrenic patients.
- Published
- 2012
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