Abstract

The influence of cholinergic and dopaminergic agents on the acquisition of a passive avoidance response in the rat is demonstrated. Trifluoperazine (0.12 mg/kg), a dopamine antagonist, inhibited task acquisition when present during training or later, during consolidation, at the 10-12 h post-training period and at no other intervening time point. Induction of amnesia was dose-dependent and was not apparent when the dose exceeded 0.12 mg/kg. This effect appears to be due to an increase in dopamine release through presynaptic receptor antagonism as similar results could be obtained by the administration of apomorphine (0.5 mg/kg), a dopamine agonist, and this effect could be antagonized by the D1 receptor selective antagonist SCH-23390. Scopolamine (0.15 mg/kg), a muscarinic antagonist, impaired acquisition of the passive avoidance response when administered during training and, separately, at the 6 h post-training period. This could not be attributed to presynaptic antagonism as oxotremorine (0.2 mg/kg), a muscarinic agonist, had no amnesic action. Administration of apomorphine or scopolamine during training and at the appropriate post-training period prevented subsequent paradigm-specific increases of neural cell adhesion molecule sialylation state in hippocampal immunoprecipitates obtained at 24 h after task acquisition and 4 h following intraventricular infusion of the labelled sialic acid precursor - N-acetyl-D-mannosamine. Oxotremorine alone did not influence neural cell adhesion molecule sialylation state. These observations provide further evidence of a regulatory role for neural cell adhesion molecule sialylation state in information storage processes.

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