Abstract

Some authors have reported that quisqualic acid lesions of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM), although producing large cortical cholinergic losses, have little effect on memory. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of quisqualic acid lesions of the NBM on working and reference memory in a double Y-maze. Each trial started with placement into one of the two end arms of the first Y-maze, and the correct response was to go down the stem (reference memory). Access was then given to the second Y-maze, the correct response being conditional upon the side of the first Y-maze from which that trial had begun (working memory). Rats were trained to an 88% correct criterion and were then given either bilateral quisqualic acid (60 nM, 0.5 μl) or sham lesions (0.9% saline, 0.5 μl) of the NBM. One week postsurgery, rats were tested on the double Y-maze task with delays of 0, 5 or 30 seconds being introduced prior to both the working and reference memory choice. NBM lesions produced a 63.2 ± 6.2% decrease of cortical choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) compared to unoperated controls. Delays affected only the working memory of the sham group. Rats with lesions showed a significant impairment of working memory at all delays, but no change in reference memory. Results indicate that quisqualic acid lesions of the NBM that produce significant reductions in cortical ChAT selectively impair working memory.

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