Repeated Restraint Stress Facilitates Fear Conditioning Independently of Causing Hippocampal CA3 Dendritic Atrophy
This study investigated whether 21 days of restraint stress (6 hr/day) and the subsequent hippocampal dendritic atrophy would affect fear conditioning, a memory task with hippocampal-dependent and hippocampal-independent components. Restraint-stressed rats were injected daily (21 days) with tianepti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioral neuroscience 1999-10, Vol.113 (5), p.902-913 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study investigated whether 21 days of restraint stress
(6 hr/day) and the subsequent hippocampal dendritic atrophy would
affect fear conditioning, a memory task with hippocampal-dependent
and hippocampal-independent components. Restraint-stressed rats were
injected daily (21 days) with tianeptine (10 mg/kg; to prevent
hippocampal atrophy) or vehicle then tested on fear conditioning
(Days 23-25, with 2 tone-shock pairings) and open field
(Day 25). Restraint stress enhanced freezing to context
(hippocampal-dependent behavior) and tone (hippocampal-independent)
and decreased open-field exploration, irrespective of whether
tianeptine was given. Results confirmed that stress produced CA3
dendritic atrophy and tianeptine prevented it. Moreover, CA3
dendritic atrophy was not permanent but reversed to control levels
by 10 days after the cessation of restraint stress. These data argue
that different neural substrates underlie spatial recognition memory
and fear conditioning. |
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ISSN: | 0735-7044 1939-0084 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0735-7044.113.5.902 |