Electrical high frequency stimulation in the dorsal striatum: Effects on response learning and on GABA levels in rats

► High frequency stimulation of dorsal striatum alters procedural memory in the Double-H task. ► High frequency stimulation of dorsal striatum results in long-term effects (19h after stimulation) on tissue GABA content. ► Unilateral high frequency stimulation of the dorsal striatum induces bilateral...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural brain research 2011-09, Vol.222 (2), p.368-374
Hauptverfasser: Schumacher, Anett, Vasconcelos, Anne Pereira de, Lecourtier, Lucas, Moser, Andreas, Cassel, Jean-Christophe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► High frequency stimulation of dorsal striatum alters procedural memory in the Double-H task. ► High frequency stimulation of dorsal striatum results in long-term effects (19h after stimulation) on tissue GABA content. ► Unilateral high frequency stimulation of the dorsal striatum induces bilateral effects on tissue GABA content. Electrical high frequency stimulation (HFS) has been used to treat various neurological and psychiatric diseases. The striatal area contributes to response learning and procedural memory. Therefore, we investigated the effect of striatal HFS application on procedural/declarative-like memory in rats. All rats were trained in a flooded Double-H maze for three days (4 trials/day) to swim to an escape platform hidden at a constant location. The starting place was the same for all trials. After each training session, HFS of the left dorsal striatum was performed over 4h in alternating 20min periods (during rest time, 10a.m. to 3p.m.). Nineteen hours after the last HFS and right after a probe trial assessing the rats’ strategy (procedural vs. declarative-like memory-based choice), animals were sacrificed and the dorsal striatum was quickly removed. Neurotransmitter levels were measured by HPLC. Stimulated rats did not differ from sham-operated and control rats in acquisition performance, but exhibited altered behavior during the probe trial (procedural memory responses being less frequent than in controls). In stimulated rats, GABA levels were significantly increased in the dorsal striatum on both sides. We suggest that HFS of the dorsal striatum does not alter learning behavior in rats but influences the strategy by which the rats solve the task. Given that the HFS-induced increase of GABA levels was found 19h after stimulation, it can be assumed that HFS has consequences lasting for several hours and which are functionally significant at a behavioral level, at least under our stimulation (frequency, timing, location, side and strength of stimulation) and testing conditions.
ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2011.04.001