Abstract
We examined whether inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (NO synthase) impairs learning in male Fischer-344 rats (9 mo) in a shock-motivated 14-unit T-maze. Rats were pretrained in one-way active avoidance of foot shock to a criterion of 13/15 avoidances in a straight runway. The next day, rats received intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections of 0.9% NaCl as controls or Nw-nitro-l-arginine (N-Arg: 3.0, 4.5, or 6.0 mg/kg) to inhibit NO synthase 30 min before maze training. During 15 trials, rats were required to negotiate each of 5 segments within 10 s to avoid footshock. Performance variables included errors (deviations from the correct pathway), runtime from start to goal, shock frequency and duration. N-Arg treatment impaired performance on all variables in a dose-dependent manner. Specifically, only the 6 mg/kg N-Arg dose significantly increased errors compared to controls over the last 10 trials but not the first 5 trials. Controls and rats treated with 3 or 4.5 mg/kg N-Arg were retested in the maze 7–10 days following training, with half receiving N-Arg (6 mg/kg i.p.) 30 min in advance. In this retention test, maze performance was not significantly affected; thus, these results indicated that NO synthase inhibition primarily impaired acquisition without impacting upon noncognitive aspects of performance. This conclusion was further reinforced by the demonstration that 6 mg/kg N-Arg did not significantly affect sensorimotor performance in a rotarod task. When rats were treated with sodium nitroprusside, an NO donor, at 1 min, but not 30 min, prior to training, the N-Arg induced impairment (6 or 8 mg/kg i.p.) in maze learning was significantly attenuated.
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