Abstract

Despite the widespread belief that MK-801 induces memory deficits associated with dementia and schizophrenia in animal models, data regarding the impairing effect of MK-801 on aversive memory have been inconclusive. In this study, we investigated the effect of MK-801 on multiple memory stages of the inhibitory avoidance task, as well as its underlying signaling mechanism in the mouse hippocampus. We successfully replicated a previous finding suggesting that systemic injection of MK-801 impaired memory acquisition, but we observed that an intrahippocampal infusion of MK-801 facilitated the same memory process. We also found that both systemic and intrahippocampal administration of MK-801 facilitated memory consolidation and memory retrieval of the inhibitory avoidance task. We demonstrated that MK-801-induced increases in shock sensitivity and locomotor activity in the pre-training regimen confounded the detrimental effect of MK-801 on memory acquisition, thereby reconciling the inconsistent results in previous studies. In addition, the memory-facilitating effect of MK-801 was found to be dependent on drug dose and shock intensity. We next showed that MK-801 induced a fast-onset increase in the extent of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) phosphorylation in the hippocampus. Finally, we observed that rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor, blocked both the MK-801-induced increases in phosphorylated mTOR and the facilitating effect of MK-801 on memory consolidation. These results indicate that hippocampal mTOR signaling mediates the facilitating effect of MK-801 on memory consolidation of the inhibitory avoidance task. These findings further imply that MK-801 indeed functions as a memory enhancer and that mTOR signaling serves as a therapeutic target for memory disorders.

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