| Literature DB >> 29089878 |
Emily F Willis1, Perry F Bartlett2, Jana Vukovic1,2.
Abstract
Studies on the role of the hippocampus in higher cognitive functions such as spatial learning and memory in rodents are reliant upon robust and objective behavioral tests. This protocol describes one such test-the active place avoidance (APA) task. This behavioral task involves the mouse continuously integrating visual cues to orientate itself within a rotating arena in order to actively avoid a shock zone, the location of which remains constant relative to the room. This protocol details the step-by-step procedures for a novel paradigm of the hippocampal-dependent APA task, measuring acquisition of spatial learning during a single 20-min trial (i.e., short-term memory), with spatial memory encoding and retrieval (i.e., long-term memory) assessed by trials conducted over consecutive days. Using the APA task, cognitive flexibility can be assessed using the reversal learning paradigm, as this increases the cognitive load required for efficient performance in the task. In addition to a detailed experimental protocol, this paper also describes the range of its possible applications, the expected key results, as well as the analytical methods to assess the data, and the pitfalls/troubleshooting measures. The protocol described herein is highly robust and produces replicable results, thus presenting an important paradigm that enables the assessment of subtle short-term changes in spatial learning and memory, such as those observed for many experimental interventions.Entities:
Keywords: acquisition; active place avoidance; cognition; hippocampus; learning; neurogenesis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089878 PMCID: PMC5651027 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Materials and equipment.
| APA arena with grid floor (diameter 77 cm) fenced with Perspex clear circular boundary (32-cm high) | Bio-Signal Group, NY, USA | N/A |
| 20-cm diameter clear Perspex cylinder | Made in-house | N/A |
| Digital video camera | Point Gray, USA | FL2-03S2M-C |
| Tracker software | Bio-Signal Group, NY, USA | Version 2.36 |
| Track Analysis software | Bio-Signal Group, NY, USA | Version 2.2 |
| 70% ethanol | N/A | N/A |
| GraphPad Prism | GraphPad Software, CA, USA | Version 7.02 |
Figure 1One-day learning paradigm demonstrating rapid acquisition of spatial learning during the active place avoidance task. (A) Photo (left) and schematic (right) of the testing arena and room. The large black and white extra-maze visual cues and shock zone location (red boundary) are depicted, with the counter-clockwise rotation of the arena indicated by the orange arrow. (B) Schematic of experimental timeline involving 14 days of handling followed by habituation (day 0), and testing (day 1). (C,F) Number of entries into the shock zone during habituation (C), and trial (F). (D,G) Representative track during habituation (D), and trial (G), where the gray line represents the path of a single mouse and each entry into the shock zone (red boundary) is visualized by a small red circle. (E,H) Heat maps during habituation (E), and trial (H), showing mice developing place-specific avoidance during the trial. Heat maps represent the merged maps of all mice, where the color of a pixel represents the average trajectory of tracks at that location (blue = low, red = high proportion of time; n = 12). All data is represented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, n = 12.
Figure 2Spatial learning and memory in active place avoidance task is allothetic, with mice able to learn reversed shock zone location. (A) Schematic of experimental design and specific testing days. (B) Schematic of the shock zone location (red boundary) and visual cues during the 5-day paradigm (days 1–5 of testing, left), day 6 (“white barrel”, middle), and reversal learning (days 7–11, right). (C) Number of entries into the shock zone during the 20-min trial over days 1–11 of the testing paradigm, measuring cumulative performance in the task; note that removal of visual cues (“white barrel”; day 6) impairs performance, as does changing the shock zone location (day 7–11). (D) Latency, i.e., time to first entry into the shock zone. (E) Examples of tracks and mean heat maps of mice during days 1–5, “white barrel” (day 6), and reversal learning (days 7–11). The gray line represents the path of a single mouse, with entry into the shock zone (red boundary) eliciting a shock (red circles). Heat maps represent the merged maps of all mice, where the color of a pixel represents the average trajectory of a track at that location (blue = low, red = high proportion of time; n = 12). All data is represented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, n = 12.