4.2 Article

Structural Plasticity in Hippocampal Cells Related to the Facilitative Effect of Intracranial Self-Stimulation on a Spatial Memory Task

Journal

BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 129, Issue 6, Pages 720-730

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/bne0000098

Keywords

apical and basal branching; CA1 pyramidal neurons; deep brain stimulation; dendritic spines; intracellular injections

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [PSI2009-07491, BFU2012-34963, AP2008-01673, PSI2013-41018-P]
  2. CIBERNED [CB06/05/0066]
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya (Departament d'Universitats, Recerca i Societat dela Informacio) [2009SGR0804]
  4. UNED (Plan de Promocion de la Investigacion)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Posttraining intracranial self-stimulation (SS) in the lateral hypothalamus facilitates the acquisition and retention of several implicit and explicit memory tasks. Here, intracellular injections of Lucifer yellow were used to assess morphological changes in hippocampal neurons that might be specifically related to the facilitative posttraining SS effect upon the acquisition and retention of a distributed spatial task in the Morris water maze. We examined the structure, size and branching complexity of cornus ammonis 1 (CA1) cells, and the spine density of CA1 pyramidal neurons and granular cells of the dentate gyrus (DG). Animals that received SS after each acquisition session performed faster and better than Sham ones-an improvement that was also evident in a probe trial 3 days after the last training session. The neuromorphological analysis revealed an increment in the size and branching complexity in apical CA1 dendritic arborization in SS-treated subjects as compared with Sham animals. Furthermore, increased spine density was observed in the CA1 field in SS animals, whereas no effects were observed in DG cells. Our results support the hypothesis that the facilitating effect of SS on the acquisition and retention of a spatial memory task could be related to structural plasticity in CA1 hippocampal cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available