The basolateral amygdala is necessary for the encoding and the expression of odor memory

  1. Yannick Sevelinges,
  2. Bertrand Desgranges and
  3. Guillaume Ferreira,1
  1. Laboratoire de Comportement, Neurobiologie et Adaptation, CNRS UMR6175, INRA UMR85, Université Tours, F-37380 Nouzilly, France

    Abstract

    Conditioned odor avoidance (COA) results from the association between a novel odor and a delayed visceral illness. The present experiments investigated the role of the basolateral amygdala (BLA) in acquisition and retrieval of COA memory. To address this, we used the GABAA agonist muscimol to temporarily inactivate the BLA during COA acquisition or expression. BLA inactivation before odor–malaise pairing greatly impaired COA tested 3 d later. In contrast, muscimol microinfusion between odor and malaise spared retention. Moreover, inactivation of the BLA before pre-exposure to the odor prevented latent inhibition of COA. This suggests that neural activity in the BLA is essential for the formation of odor representation. BLA inactivation before the retrieval test also blocked COA memory expression when performed either 3 d (recent memory) or 28 d (remote memory) after acquisition. This effect was transitory as muscimol-treated animals were not different from controls during the subsequent extinction tests. Moreover, muscimol infusion in the BLA neither affected olfactory perception nor avoidance behavior, and it did not induce a state-dependent learning. Altogether, these findings suggest that neural activity in the BLA is required for the encoding and the retrieval of odor memory. Moreover, the BLA seems to play a permanent role in the expression of COA.

    Footnotes

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