Memory Consolidation for the Discrimination of Frequency-Modulated Tones in Mongolian Gerbils Is Sensitive to Protein-Synthesis Inhibitors Applied to the Auditory Cortex

  1. Michaela Kraus1,
  2. Horst Schicknick2,
  3. Wolfram Wetzel1,
  4. Frank Ohl1,
  5. Sabine Staak1, and
  6. Wolfgang Tischmeyer1,3
  1. 1Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, D-39008 Magdeburg, Germany; 2FAN GmbH, Magdeburg, Germany

Abstract

Differential conditioning of Mongolian gerbils to linearly frequency-modulated tones (FM) has recently received experimental attention. In the study of the role of cerebral protein synthesis for FM discrimination memory, gerbils received post-training bilateral injections of anisomycin into the auditory cortex under light halothane anesthesia. Compared with saline-treated controls, anisomycin-treated gerbils showed a discrimination decrement during the subsequent three days of training. They markedly improved their performance within training sessions, but started each session at low levels. When repeatedly trained gerbils received post-session injections of anisomycin, discrimination performance during subsequent sessions was similar to the pre-injection performance, indicating that retention, retrieval, reconsolidation, and expression of the established reaction were not affected. However, the improvement of a partially established discrimination reaction was impaired after this treatment. Intracortical injections of emetine confirmed this finding. Neither drug affected FM discrimination learning when given several days before the initial training. Our results suggest that protein-synthesis inhibitors applied to the auditory cortex of gerbils during the post-acquisition phase interfered with learning and memory-related aspects of FM processing. The resulting deficit was evident for a number of post-injection training days. This effect was probably due to impaired consolidation, i.e., processes required for long-term stabilization or retrieval of the memory trace while leaving short-term memory intact.

Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL tischmeyer{at}ifn-magdeburg.de; FAX 49–391–6263229.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.learnmem.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/lm.47502.

    • Received February 11, 2002.
    • Accepted June 28, 2002.
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