| Literature DB >> 7982084 |
Abstract
One to three day old chicks spontaneously peck at small objects. When presented with a chrome bead coated with the bitter tasting substance methyl anthranilate (MeA), chicks peck once, display a characteristic disgust response and subsequently avoid a similar bead. Chicks that are trained on a water coated bead continue to peck a similar bead on retrial. Twenty four hours after training on this one-trial passive avoidance paradigm, chicks were tested for retention. The brains of chicks displaying the correct behavioural response (> 90%) were removed and the lobus parolfactorius from each hemisphere was dissected from the brain and impregnated using a rapid Golgi technique. Analysis of large multipolar neurones by centrifugal dendritic branch order showed that there were significantly more spines on all orders examined in the left hemispheres of MeA-trained chicks compared to water-trained control chicks. Significantly higher spine densities were also found on 4th and 5th order branches of neurones in the right lobus parolfactorius of MeA-trained chicks compared to water-trained chicks. No significant difference in dendritic length was observed. These results suggest that substantial plasticity occurs in post-synaptic structures in the lobus parolfactorius following passive avoidance training. It is suggested that this plasticity is related to processes involved in long term information storage.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7982084 DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(94)91578-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res ISSN: 0006-8993 Impact factor: 3.252