Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 11, 2848-2854, Copyright © 1991 by Society for Neuroscience
Interaction of neurotransmitter systems in the hippocampus: a study of some behavioral effects of hippocampal sympathetic ingrowth
V Ayyagari, LE Harrell and DS Parsons
Department of Neurology, Veterans Administration Hospital, Birmingham, Alabama.
Recent research has suggested that normal learning/memory may depend upon
the balance between central noradrenergic and cholinergic systems. This
hypothesis has particular relevance to the study of the neuronal
rearrangement that follows cholinergic denervation of hippocampus. In this,
peripheral noradrenergic fibers, originating from the superior cervical
ganglion, grow into the hippocampus in response to lesions of the medial
septal (MS) cholinergic cell bodies. To understand further the influence of
hippocampal sympathetic ingrowth (HSI) on behavior, gustatory neophobia,
passive avoidance (PA) learning, and open field activity were studied. Male
Sprague-Dawley rats underwent one of four surgical procedures: MS lesions
and sham ganglionectomy (ingrowth group; MS/HSI group), sham MS lesions and
ganglionectomy (Gx group), MS lesions and ganglionectomy (no-ingrowth
group; MS/Gx group), or sham MS lesions and sham ganglionectomy (CON
group). Behavioral testing began 4 weeks following surgery. The time to
acquire the PA task was similar among all groups; however, the initial
latency to enter the dark chamber of the PA apparatus was longer, and the
number of partial reentries greatest, for MS/HSI animals. Retention testing
at 24 hr revealed that MS/HSI animals were significantly impaired when
compared to the CON and MS/Gx groups. The MS/Gx and the CON groups
demonstrated gustatory neophobia, preferring water to saccharin solution,
while gustatory neophobia was absent in the MS/HSI and Gx groups. MS/HSI
animals were found to be more active in the open field than the other
groups. Biochemical studies revealed the expected loss of ChAT activity in
the dorsal and ventral hippocampi of lesioned animals along with elevated
levels of norepinephrine (NE) in the dorsal hippocampus of MS/HSI
animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)