Spatial Learning in the 5-HT1B Receptor Knockout Mouse: Selective Facilitation/Impairment Depending on the Cognitive Demand

  1. Marie-Christine Buhot1,4,
  2. Mathieu Wolff1,
  3. Narimane Benhassine1,
  4. Pierre Costet2,
  5. René Hen3, and
  6. Louis Segu1
  1. 1Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Unité Mixte de Recherche 5106, Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives, Université de Bordeaux 1, 33405 Talence cedex, France
  2. 2Laboratoire de Transgénèse, Université de Bordeaux 2, 33076 Bordeaux cedex, France
  3. 3Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA

Abstract

Age-related memory decline is associated with a combined dysfunction of the cholinergic and serotonergic systems in the hippocampus and frontal cortex, in particular. The 5-HT1B receptor occupies strategic cellular and subcellular locations in these structures, where it plays a role in the modulation of ACh release. In an attempt to characterize the contribution of this receptor to memory functions, 5-HT1B receptor knockout (KO) mice were submitted to various behavioral paradigms carried out in the same experimental context (water maze), which were aimed at exposing mice to various levels of memory demand. 5-HT1BKO mice exhibited a facilitation in the acquisition of a hippocampal-dependent spatial reference memory task in the Morris water maze. This facilitation was selective of task difficulty, showing thus that the genetic inactivation of the 5-HT1B receptor is associated with facilitation when the complexity of the task is increased, and reveals a protective effect on age-related hippocampal-dependent memory decline. Young-adult and aged KO and wild-type (WT) mice were equally able to learn a delayed spatial matching-to-sample working memory task in a radial-arm water maze with short (0 or 5 min) delays. However, 5-HT1BKO mice, only, exhibited a selective memory impairment at intermediate and long (15, 30, and 60 min) delays. Treatment by scopolamine induced the same pattern of performance in wild type as did the mutation for short (5 min, no impairment) and long (60 min, impairment) delays. Taken together, these studies revealed a beneficial effect of the mutation on the acquisition of a spatial reference memory task, but a deleterious effect on a working memory task for long delays. This 5-HT1BKO mouse story highlights the problem of the potential existence of “global memory enhancers.”

Footnotes

  • 5 This measure corresponds to the accumulated distance between the subject and the center of the platform, averaged on the number of record units (every 40 msec). Meandist values are particularly useful in that they are totally independent of the latency, thus of the swim speed. A low value of meandist-PF emphasizes spatial strategies characterized by correct initial orientations toward the platform, which minimize the distance between the subject and the goal.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.learnmem.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/lm.60203.

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