Lesions of the anterior thalamic nuclei and intralaminar thalamic nuclei: place and visual discrimination learning in the water maze

被引:0
作者
Pierre-Henri Moreau
Yanina Tsenkina
Lucas Lecourtier
Joëlle Lopez
Brigitte Cosquer
Mathieu Wolff
John Dalrymple-Alford
Jean-Christophe Cassel
机构
[1] Université de Strasbourg,Laboratoire d’Imagerie et Neurosciences Cognitives, UMR 7237
[2] CNRS,Department of Psychology
[3] University of Bordeaux,Department of Medicine
[4] INCIA,undefined
[5] UMR 5287,undefined
[6] CNRS,undefined
[7] INCIA,undefined
[8] UMR 5287,undefined
[9] New Zealand Brain Research Institute,undefined
[10] University of Canterbury,undefined
[11] University of Otago,undefined
来源
Brain Structure and Function | 2013年 / 218卷
关键词
Anterior thalamic nuclei; Hippocampus; Intralaminar thalamic nuclei; Spatial memory; Striatum; Visual pattern memory; Water maze;
D O I
暂无
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学科分类号
摘要
Medial thalamic damage produces memory deficits in humans (e.g., Korsakoff’s syndrome) and experimental animals. Both the anterior thalamic nuclei (ATN) and rostral intralaminar plus adjacent lateral thalamic nuclei (ILN/LT) have been implicated. Based on the differences in their main connections with other neural structures, we tested the prediction that ATN lesions would selectively impair acquisition of spatial location discrimination, reflecting a hippocampal system deficit, whereas ILN/LT lesions would impair acquisition of visual pattern discrimination, reflecting a striatal system deficit. Half the rats were first trained in a spatial task in a water maze before switching to a visual task in the same maze, while the remainder were tested with the reverse order of tasks. Compared with sham-operated controls, (1) rats with ATN lesions showed impaired place learning, but normal visual discrimination learning, (2) rats with ILN/LT lesions showed no deficit on either task. Rats with ATN lesions were also hyperactive when their home cage was placed in a novel room and remained more active than ILN/LT or SHAM rats for the subsequent 21 h, especially during the nocturnal phase. These findings confirmed the influence of ATN lesions on spatial learning, but failed to support the view that ILN/LT lesions disrupt striatal-dependent memory.
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页码:657 / 667
页数:10
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