Abstract
Microinfusion of cholinergic agents were made in various sites in the dorsal hippocampal formation of urethane anaesthetized rats. Infusions of eserine or carbachol elicited hippocampal theta activity when made in areas containing high levels of cholinergic markers: the stratum oriens and radiatum of the CA1 and CA3, the stratum moleculare and stratum granulosum of the dentate gyrus and the infragnular region of the hilus. Subsequent infusions of atropine sulfate antagonized the theta activity. Control infusions of equal volumes of saline in active sites were without effect. Infusions of eserine or carbachol in the vicinity of the hippocampal fissure, the stratum lacunosum/moleculare of the CA1 or CA3, in the deep regions of the hilus, and in the lateral ventricle and overlying neocortex, were also without effect. Furthermore, in active sites, the latency to onset of theta and subsequent theta frequency, were both directly related to the total amount of carbachol infused. Thus, areas in which theta could be elicited with a cholinergic agonist (carbachol), or an anticholinesterase (eserine) and antagonized with atropine, were found to correspond well to areas previously found to contain well to areas previously found to contain a high density of cholinoceptive neurons, using autoradiographic and immunohistochemical techniques. These results provide further support for the involvement of acetylcholine as a neurotransmitter in the generation of type 2 theta in the hippocampal formation.
Published Version
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