Abstract

To examine the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the maintenance of working memory of rats, the effects of chronic administration (in drinking water) of the NO synthase inhibitor, N w-nitro- l-arginine methyl ester ( l-NAME), on this behavior was examined with a simple test of remembering recently explored objects. Unlike other working memory tasks that require a subject to perform for a reward such as food or water or to avoid shock, our task measured spontaneous exploration of novel and familiar objects and has been described as a “pure” working memory task [9]. Normal subjects spend significantly more time in contact with new environmental components and less time with familiar objects. A subject that extensively reexplores a stimulus with which it has previous experience is presumed to exhibit some memory loss associated with the object. Memory changes were evaluated by measuring the relative time subjects explored familiar versus new stimulus objects. Rats ( n = 15) that chronically drank l-NAME (≈ 90 mg/kg/day) for 14 days spent significantly less time exploring a novel object than did rats ( n = 13) that drank only tap water ( p < .05). This effect of t.-NAME was abolished by concurrent administration of l-Arginine (≈ 4.5 g/kg/day). Total object exploration was not affected by our drug treatments, suggesting that our object discrimination task is not activity dependent. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that NO is required for some forms of working memory.

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