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vol.15 número1HERPETOFAUNA DE NEGUANJE, PARQUE NACIONAL NATURAL TAIRONA, CARIBE COLOMBIANOPOLIMORFISMO DE MICROSATELITES EN INDIVIDUOS DE RAZAS DE BOVINO CRIOLLO COLOMBIANO índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
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Acta Biológica Colombiana

versión impresa ISSN 0120-548X

Resumen

TRONCOSO, JULIETA; LAMPREA, MARISOL; CUESTAS, DIANA MARCELA  y  MUNERA, ALEJANDRO. High stress interfers with evocation and promotes extintion of spatial memory in the Barnes maze. Acta biol.Colomb. [online]. 2010, vol.15, n.1, pp.207-222. ISSN 0120-548X.

To evaluate the effects of acute stress on evocation and extinction of a spatial memory task, we used rats trained in the Barnes circular maze. The training protocol consisted of eight acquisition trials (intertrial interval, ITI; 5 min) where animals must learn to find an escape box placed under one of these eighteen holes of the maze. All animals learned the spatial memory task as indicated by diminished escape latency and weighted errors along the eight acquisition trials. Twenty four hours after training spatial memory evocation and extinction were tested (one trial with escape box, and seven consecutive trials without escape box, ITI: 5 min). One hour and a half before memory evaluation session half of the animals underwent movement restriction during one hour (one hour stress, 1H) and were allowed 30 min to recover, while the other half stayed in their home cage without manipulation (control, C). Stressed animals displayed a significant increase both in escape latency and in weighted errors during the trial with scape box. These results indicate that movement restriction-induced stress deteriorates the spatial memory evocation. Moreover, movement restriction-induced stress during one hour facilitates extinction, showed by the non-persistence in the exploration of the escape hole during the trials without escape box.

Palabras clave : Barnes maze; spatial memory; evocation; extinction; acute stress.

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