4.5 Article

Histamine H3 receptor-mediated impairment of contextual fear conditioning and in-vivo inhibition of cholinergic transmission in the rat basolateral amygdala

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 1522-1532

Publisher

BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.0953-816x.2001.01780.x

Keywords

ACh; amygdala; conditioned freezing; H-2 receptor; H-3 receptor; memory; microdialysis; scopolamine

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We investigated the effects of agents acting at histamine receptors on both, spontaneous release of ACh from the basolateral amygdala (BLA) of freely moving rats, and fear conditioning. Extensive evidence suggests that the effects of histamine on cognition might be explained by the modulation of cholinergic systems. Using the microdialysis technique in freely moving rats, we demonstrated that perfusion of the BLA with histaminergic compounds modulates the spontaneous release of ACh. The addition of 100 mm KCl to the perfusion medium strongly stimulated ACh release, whereas, 0.5 muM tetrodotoxin (TTX) inhibited spontaneous ACh release by more than 50%. Histaminergic H-3 antagonists (ciproxifan, clobenpropit and thioperamide), directly administered to the BLA, decreased ACh spontaneous release, an effect fully antagonized by the simultaneous perfusion of the BLA with cimetidine, an H-2 antagonist, Local administration of cimetidine alone increased ACh spontaneous release slightly, but significantly. Conversely, the administration of H-1 antagonists failed to alter ACh spontaneous release. Rats receiving intra-BLA, bilateral injections of the H-3 antagonists at doses similar to those inhibiting ACh spontaneous release, immediately after contextual fear conditioning, showed memory consolidation impairment of contextual fear conditioning. Post-training, bilateral injections of 50 mug scopolamine also had an adverse effect on memory retention, These observations provide the first evidence that histamine receptors are involved in the modulation of cholinergic tone in the amygdala and in the consolidation of fear conditioning.

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