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Locus coeruleus and labile memory
Authors:Steven F. Zornetzer  Wickliffe C. Abraham  Robert Appleton
Affiliation:Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine, University of Florida Gainesville, FL 32610, USA
Abstract:
Memory lability is defined as the period of time recently-formed memory remains susceptible to experimental modification. Electrolytic lesions delivered through chronic indwelling electrodes to the locus coeruleus (LC) complex of mice, made shortly after learning, resulted in an extension of memory lability. Mice with unilateral, but not bilateral LC damage became amnesic following electroconvulsive shock (ECS) administered 7 days (168 hr) after memory formation. ECS had no effect on memory in LC-lesioned mice when administered 14 days following training. In a second experiment, the temporal relationship between time of memory formation and time of LC damage was found to be critical to the occurrence of this extended period of lability. In a third experiment, we tested the possibility that prolonged trace lability was the result of weaker memory formation as reflected by decreased persistence (i.e. faster forgetting) of the memory. The results indicated equal rates of forgetting for normal and LC-lesioned mice. Present results support the hypothesis that the locus coeruleus complex normally plays an important role in delimiting the time-course of initially labile stages of memory. By inference, these data suggest further that such a delimiting function of the locus coeruleus is mediated through its noradrenergic modulation of other brain regions.
Keywords:Locus coeruleus  Retrograde amnesia  Memory lability  Norepinephrine  Inhibitory avoidance  Brain lesions
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