Abstract

The present study assessed the role of the cholinergic systems on the expression of perforant path long-term potentiation (LTP) in rat hippocampal slices from the infant and adult brain. To denervate the cholinergic systems, 192 IgG–saporin was injected into the lateral ventricle of the infant (2-weeks-old) and adult (6-weeks-old) rat brain. There, choline acetyltransferase-immunoreactive fibers were barely detectable 2 weeks and 2 months after injection for both the groups. For the infant rats, perforant path LTP was not affected by selective cholinergic denervation; the probability of LTP development was 0.83 (five out of six slices) and 0.78 (seven out of nine slices) at 2 weeks and 2 months later in 192 IgG–saporin-treated slices, as compared with 0.83 at each period in control saline-treated slices. In contrast, the expression of the LTP was blocked by selective cholinergic denervation for the adult rats; the probability of LTP development was 0 (zero out of 10 slices) and 0.38 (three out of eight slices) at 2 weeks and 2 months later in 192 IgG–saporin-treated slices, as compared with 0.8 (eight out of 10 slices) and 0.83 (five out of six slices) at each period in control saline-treated slices. The results of the present study thus suggest that the cholinergic systems play a crucial role in the expression of LTP in the adult brain and that the denervated systems in the infant brain could be compensated by the sprouting of non-cholinergic fibers.

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