Literature DB >> 15489024

Role of neuronal nicotinic receptors in the effects of nicotine and ethanol on contextual fear conditioning.

J M Wehner1, J J Keller, A B Keller, M R Picciotto, R Paylor, T K Booker, A Beaudet, S F Heinemann, S A Balogh.   

Abstract

Nicotine can enhance contextual learning while ethanol impairs some forms of learning. Nicotine can overcome some of the impairing effects of ethanol when the two drugs are co-administered. The specific brain nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) that mediate nicotine's effects on contextual learning and whether any of ethanol's actions are mediated by nAChRs are unknown. The potential roles of nAChRs in contextual and cued fear conditioning as well as the effects of nicotine, ethanol, or co-administration of nicotine and ethanol were examined in wild type and homozygous null mutant mice from alpha7, beta2, beta3, and beta4 mouse lines at 24 h after training. Nicotine was given prior to training and testing, whereas ethanol was given only before training. Nicotine enhanced contextual learning in both alpha7 wild types and mutants when mice were trained at 0.17 mA, but not 0.35 mA. Mutants lacking the alpha7 subunit were less sensitive to the memory impairing effects of ethanol trained at 0.35 mA. beta2 Null mutants receiving saline showed a small, but significant, impairment in contextual learning compared with wild type littermates when the shock stimulus was 0.35 mA. Beta2 Null mutant mice also did not respond to the cognitive enhancing effects of nicotine alone, or after ethanol administration. beta3 and beta4 null mutants did not differ from wild types either after saline or any of drug treatments. These results show that beta2-containing nAChRs, but not beta3- or beta4-containing receptors, mediate the enhancing effects of nicotine on contextual learning and confirm previous studies implicating beta2 in other forms of learning. A new role for alpha7 nAChRs in regulating sensitivity to the cognitive disrupting effects of ethanol is proposed.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15489024     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2004.07.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  57 in total

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