Abstract

Male hooded rats were habituated, classically conditioned with 30 CS-UCS (light-footshock) pairings, and subsequently tested for corticosterone response or instrumental hurdle-jump acquisition. In Experiment 1, corticosterone levels were lowest during chamber placement alone (during habituation), higher during presentations of the CS after conditioning with a low shock intensity, even higher during classical conditioning with the low shock intensity, and highest during classical conditioning or CS presentations involving a high shock intensity. Injections of the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone before both conditioning and hurdle-jump acquisition sessions (Experiment 2) did not affect acquisition occurring during early trials, but produced slow hurdle-jump speeds late in the session. This agrees with previous findings of glucocorticoid facilitation of fear extinction, but does not indicate a simple suppression of fear by dexamethasone. When dexamethasone was given only prior to the classical conditioning session (Experiment 3) hurdle-jump acquisition was poor only on the early trials, and corticosterone levels after 60 min of CS presentations were higher than control values. These results agree with the proposal of a state-dependent effect of dexamethasone on memory retrieval.

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