Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6258960 Behavioural Brain Research 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Gustatory thalamus lesions do not disrupt drug-induced CTA learning.•Gustatory thalamus plays a critical role in taste neophobia.•Gustatory thalamus lesion-induced neophobia deficit does not delay learning.

The present study re-examined the involvement of the gustatory thalamus (GT) in the acquisition of drug- and toxin-induced conditioned taste aversions (CTAs) using a standardized procedure involving 15-min taste trials in rats injected with morphine (Experiment 1), lithium chloride (Experiment 2) or amphetamine (Experiment 3). Contrary to previous results, GT lesions did not eliminate drug-induced CTAs. Rather, GT-lesioned rats acquired aversions of comparable magnitude to non-lesioned subjects but from an elevated intake on the first conditioning trial. A similar pattern of lesion effects was found in the acquisition of an illness-induced CTA. Thus, we conclude that GT lesions do not differentially influence CTAs conditioned with drugs or toxins. The lesion-induced elevated intake of a novel tastant confirms an unappreciated role for the GT in taste neophobia.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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