Abstract

Acetylcholine (ACh) is known to play an important role in memory functions, and its deficit has been proposed to cause the cognitive decline associated with advanced age and Alzheimer's disease (the cholinergic hypothesis). Although many studies have tested the cholinergic hypothesis for recently acquired memory, only a few have investigated the role of ACh in the retrieval process of well-trained cognitive memory, which describes the memory established from repetition and daily routine. To examine this point, we trained rats to perform a two-alternative forced-choice visual detection task. Each trial was started by having the rats pull upward a central-lever, which triggered the presentation of a visual stimulus to the right or left side of the display monitor, and then pulling upward a stimulus-relevant choice-lever located on both sides. Rats learned the task within 10 days, and the task training was continued for a month. Task performance was measured with or without systemic administration of a muscarinic ACh receptor (mAChR) antagonist, scopolamine (SCOP), prior to the test. After 30 min of SCOP administration, rats stopped manipulating any lever even though they explored the lever and surrounding environment, suggesting a loss of the task-related associative memory. Three hours later, rats were recovered to complete the trial, but the rats selected the levers irrespective of the visual stimulus, suggesting they remembered a series of lever-manipulations in association with a reward, but not association between the reward and visual stimulation. Furthermore, an m1-AChR, but not nicotinic AChR antagonist caused a similar deficit in the task execution. SCOP neither interfered with locomotor activity nor drinking behavior, while it influenced anxiety. These results suggest that the activation of mAChRs at basal ACh levels is essential for the recall of well-trained cognitive memory.

Highlights

  • A loss of cholinergic function in the central nervous system has been demonstrated to contribute significantly to the cognitive decline associated with advanced age and Alzheimer’s disease (AD; reviewed, Bartus, 2000)

  • RATS ACQUIRE WELL-TRAINED COGNITIVE MEMORY BY REPETITIVE TRAINING OVER THE LONG-TERM In order to investigate the functional roles of ACh in the retrieval process of well-trained memory established from daily routine, we adopted operant conditioning based on a 2AFC visual detection task that requires cognitive procedures in a behavioral choice-box (Figure 1A; Movie S1; Soma et al, 2013c)

  • To confirm whether SCOP caused its effects by acting on the central nervous system, we tested methyl-SCOP, which is an muscarinic ACh receptor (mAChR) antagonist that is impermeable to the bloodbrain barrier (BBB)

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Summary

Introduction

A loss of cholinergic function in the central nervous system has been demonstrated to contribute significantly to the cognitive decline associated with advanced age and Alzheimer’s disease (AD; reviewed, Bartus, 2000). This hypothetical causality is known as “the cholinergic hypothesis,” which was initially presented over 30 years ago (Bartus et al, 1982). Brains from patients of old age or AD-related cognitive dysfunction have consistently shown damage or abnormalities in cholinergic pathways that appeared to correlate well with the level of cognitive decline (Whitehouse et al, 1981, 1982) This hypothesis has since served as the basis for the majority of treatment strategies and drug development approaches for AD to date. Agnosia is defined as an inability to recognize objects that are familiar or well-known (Bennett, 2000; Abe et al, 2007)

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