Involvement of brain endogenous cholecystokinin in stress-induced impairment of spatial recognition memory.

Neuroscience

Departement de Pharmacochimie Moléculaire et Structurale, INSERM U266, CNRS FRE2463, UFR des Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques 4 avenue de l'Observtoire, 75270 06, Paris cedex, France.

Published: August 2003

The central fragment of cholecystokinin, CCK8, plays a critical role in stress-related changes in behavior and memory. Therefore, we investigated whether the endogenous cholecystokininergic system is involved in the impairment of attention and/or memory induced by stressful conditions. Plasma corticosterone concentrations increased three-fold and plasma adrenocorticotropin (ACTH); concentrations increased five-fold when rats were maintained in the open arm of an elevated plus maze for 5 min. The same stress conditions impaired spatial recognition in the two-trial memory task. In addition, this stress led to a significant decrease in the extracellular levels of cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity in the dorsal subiculum/CA1 of the hippocampus and partially suppressed the increase obtained during the acquisition phase of memory. This suggests that the cholecystokininergic system in the hippocampus is involved in stress-induced impairment of spatial recognition memory.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0306-4522(02)00932-6DOI Listing

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