info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Dopamine in the dorsal hippocampus impairs the late-consolidation of cocaine-associated memory
Fecha
2014-01Registro en:
Kramar, Cecilia Paula; Chefer, Vladimir I.; Wise, Roy A.; Medina, Jorge Horacio; Barbano, María Flavia; Dopamine in the dorsal hippocampus impairs the late-consolidation of cocaine-associated memory; Nature Publishing Group; Neuropsychopharmacology; 39; 1-2014; 1645-1653
0893-133X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Kramar, Cecilia Paula
Chefer, Vladimir I.
Wise, Roy A.
Medina, Jorge Horacio
Barbano, María Flavia
Resumen
Cocaine is thought to be addictive because it elevates dopamine levels in the striatum, reinforcing drug-seeking habits. Cocaine also elevates dopamine levels in the hippocampus, a structure involved in contextual conditioning as well as in reward function. Hippocampal dopamine promotes the late phase of consolidation of an aversive step-down avoidance memory. Here, we examined the role of hippocampal dopamine function in the persistence of the conditioned increase in preference for a cocaine-associated compartment. Blocking dorsal hippocampal D1-type receptors (D1Rs) but not D2-type receptors (D2Rs) 12 h after a single training trial extended persistence of the normally short-lived memory; conversely, a general and a specific phospholipase C-coupled D1R agonist (but not a D2R or adenylyl cyclase-coupled D1R agonist) decreased the persistence of the normally long-lived memory established by three-trial training. These effects of D1 agents were opposite to those previously established in a step-down avoidance task, and were here also found to be opposite to those in a lithium chloride-conditioned avoidance task. After returning to normal following cocaine injection, dopamine levels in the dorsal hippocampus were found elevated again at the time when dopamine antagonists and agonists were effective: between 13 and 17 h after cocaine injection. These findings confirm that, long after the making of a cocaine-place association, hippocampal activity modulates memory consolidation for that association via a dopamine-dependent mechanism. They suggest a dynamic role for dorsal hippocampal dopamine in this late-phase memory consolidation and, unexpectedly, differential roles for late consolidation of memories for places that induce approach or withdrawal because of a drug association.