Abstract

Rat pups readily form a 24-h associative odor preference after a single trial of odor paired with intermittent stroking. Recent evidence shows that this training trial, which normally increases AMPA receptor responses in the anterior piriform cortex both 3 and 24 h following training, induces a down-regulation of NMDA receptors 3 h later followed by NMDA receptor up-regulation at 24 h. When retrained with the same odor at 3 h, rat pups unlearn the original odor preference. Unlearning can be prevented by blocking NMDA receptors during retraining. Here, the mechanisms that initiate NMDA receptor down-regulation are assessed. Blocking mGluR receptors or calcineurin during training prevents down-regulation of NMDA receptors 3 h following training. Blocking NMDA receptors during training does not affect NMDA receptor down-regulation. Thus, down-regulation can be engaged separately from associative learning. When unlearning occurs, AMPA and NMDA receptor levels at 24 h are reset to control levels. Calcineurin blockade during retraining prevents unlearning consistent with the role of NMDA receptor down-regulation. The relationship of these events to the metaplasticity and plasticity mechanisms of long-term depression and depotentiation is discussed. We suggest a possible functional role of NMDA receptor down-regulation in offline stabilization of learned odor representations.

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