| Literature DB >> 1336389 |
B Paier1, M Windisch, U Eggenreich.
Abstract
The effects of two subcutaneously injected peptide solutions CERE (100 mg/kg b. wt.) and E021 (1 mg/kg b. wt.) and of 0.9% saline on passive avoidance reaction (PAR) of young rats were examined. Animals were trained and tested in a step-through avoidance task using a footshock of 0.5 mA or 1 mA. Step-through latencies were observed up to 200 s and from these data the percentage of good learners (latency = 200 s) and bad learners (latency < 200 s) was calculated. Two experimental schedules were performed (n > 6). In Expt. 1 rat pups were chronically treated with the substances within the first 7 days after birth. In Expt. 2 the 7 days of treatment started in the 4th postnatal week. In both experiments PAR acquisition was trained on the 28th day after birth (learning trial), PAR extinction testing started on the 29th day (retention trials). After applying a 0.5-mA footshock, rat pups treated with E021 within the first 7 days of life (Expt. 1) displayed significantly slower PAR extinction when compared to saline- and CERE-treated rats. In the 1 mA groups, significant differences in step-through latencies were measured between 0.9% saline- and E021-pretreated animals on retention day 11 and between saline and CERE on retention days 9 and 13. E021-treated rats of Expt. 2, receiving a footshock intensity of 0.5 mA, showed significant lower step-through latencies when compared to E021-treated rats of Expt. 1. In Expt. 2 no significant differences between treatment groups were observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1336389 DOI: 10.1016/s0166-4328(05)80308-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332