Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6281823 | Neuroscience Letters | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
There is increasing evidence that nitric oxide may be involved in learning and memory. However, there remain comparatively few studies that have explored the relationship between nitric oxide signaling and fear extinction, an inhibitory learning model. In the present study, we tested the effects of nitric oxide synthase inhibitor l-NAME on three tone fear extinction tasks in rats. In task 1, rats received fear conditioning, extinction training and extinction test in the same context (AAA design). In task 2, rats received fear conditioning in context A, extinction training in context B and extinction test in context A (ABA design). In task 3, rats received fear conditioning in context A, extinction training and extinction test in context B (ABB design). l-NAME (10, 20 and 40Â mg/kg) was injected intraperitoneally 30Â min prior to extinction training in each task. Percent of time spent freezing was used to measure conditioned fear response. We found that l-NAME administrations had no effect on freezing in task 1 and 2 but produced a dose-dependent increase in task 3. Further results indicated that the increased freezing in task 3 was not attributed to state-dependency effects or nonspecific changes of locomotor activity that followed l-NAME injection. These results showed that l-NAME produced a task-dependent impairment of fear extinction, and implied that nitric oxide signaling was involved in memory process of certain extinction tasks.
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Authors
Huaiqing Luo, Li Han, Shaowen Tian,