The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 2002, 22(18):8277-8286
Selective Modification of Short-Term Hippocampal Synaptic
Plasticity and Impaired Memory Extinction in Mice with a Congenitally
Reduced Hippocampal Commissure
Lesley A.
Schimanski1,
Douglas
Wahlsten3, 4, and
Peter V.
Nguyen1, 2, 3
Departments of 1 Physiology and
2 Psychiatry and 3 Centre for Neuroscience,
University of Alberta School of Medicine, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H7,
Canada, and 4 Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E9, Canada
The hippocampus is critical for forming new long-term memories, but
the contributions of the hippocampal commissure (HC) to memory function
and hippocampal synaptic plasticity are unclear. To shed light on this
issue, we characterized behavioral memory and hippocampal synaptic
plasticity in two inbred mouse strains. BALB/cWah1 mice display a range
of corpus callosal defects and an intact HC, whereas 9XCA/Wah mice
exhibit a complete absence of corpus callosum and a greatly
reduced HC. No differences between strains were found in long-term
potentiation (LTP) within two synaptic pathways in hippocampal slices.
However, paired-pulse facilitation was deficient in area CA1 of slices
from 9XCA/Wah, and it was rescued by decreasing extracellular
[Ca2+], suggesting that presynaptic calcium
dynamics may be altered in this strain. In addition, contextual fear
extinction was impaired in 9XCA/Wah mice, but performance on cued fear
extinction and on 24 hr memory tests for cued and contextual fear
conditioning were not significantly different between strains. Thus, an
intact HC is critical for normal extinction of contextual fear. Intact interhemispheric connectivity is not required for acquisition or
expression of cued and contextual fear conditioning. LTP was normal in
slices from mice that lacked an intact HC, and this was correlated with
normal performance on fear conditioning tests. In contrast, impaired
short-term synaptic plasticity was correlated with defective contextual
memory extinction in mice lacking an intact HC. Thus, the HC in mice is
vital for particular aspects of memory function and for short-term
synaptic modification in specific hippocampal circuits.
Key words:
hippocampal commissure; memory; learning; LTP; fear
conditioning; extinction; agenesis; mouse strains; synaptic
plasticity
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22188277-10$05.00/0