Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4316308 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2006 | 5 Pages |
A weakly reinforced variant of the single trial passive avoidance task developed for the day-old chick typically fails to consolidate long-term memory. However, administration of zaprinast, a phosphodiesterase (PDE) type 5 inhibitor, (ic; 10 μl/side) immediately post-training resulted in a dose-dependent increase in retention at test 180 min post-training. Further, 100 μM zaprinast resulted in high levels of retention at test 180 min post-training when administered from 10 min before training to 10 min after training. Finally, 100 μM zaprinast, when administered immediately post-training, resulted in the consolidation of long-term memory at a number of times of test extending as late as 24 h post-training. Inhibition of PDE type 5 is known to increase cellular cGMP levels. Previous investigations using a strongly reinforced variant of this task have suggested a role for cGMP in memory retrieval, we now postulate that cGMP is also necessary for memory formation in chicks trained using passive avoidance.