Abstract
In a single 10-s training trial, hatchling chicks were conditioned to suppress their spontaneous peck response to a small spherical target by coating it with an aversive liquid. A 24-h test trial employing a dry target demonstrated a robust memory for the training manifested in passive avoidance behavior. Leupeptin, a low-molecular-weight antiprotease, injected i.c.v. 1 h or 15 min prior to training attenuated the long-term avoidance response but not the initial training-induced peck suppression. Leupeptin had no effect on memory if given posttraining. A dose response experiment revealed that a 100- or 200-μg dose of leupeptin reliably impaired conditioned avoidance, whereas a 25 or 50-μg dose was ineffective. A dipeptide leupeptin analog ( l-leucyl- l-arginine) possessed one-half the potency of the tripeptide in the memory task, and a different protease inhibitor (aprotinin) failed to effect the conditioned avoidance behavior. The mechanisms by which leupeptin may exert its influence in this behavioral paradigm and others are discussed.
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