The Japanese Journal of Pharmacology
Online ISSN : 1347-3506
Print ISSN : 0021-5198
ISSN-L : 0021-5198
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The Scopolamine-Induced Impairment of Spatial Cognition Parallels the Acetylcholine Release in the Ventral Hippocampus in Rats
Kenichi MishimaKatsunori IwasakiHiroshi TsukikawaYoshiaki MatsumotoNobuaki EgashiraKohji AbeTakashi EgawaMichihiro Fujiwara
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2000 Volume 84 Issue 2 Pages 163-173

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Abstract

We investigated the relationship between the induction of spatial cognition impairment in the 8−arm radial maze task and regional changes(ventral hippocampus(VH), dorsal hippocampus, frontal cortex, and basolateral amygdala nucleus)in brain acetylcholine(ACh)release using microdialysis in rats treated with muscarinic(M)receptor antagonists.In a behavioral study, two M1 antagonists, scopolamine(0.5 mg/kg, i.p.and 20 μg, i.c.v.)and pirenzepine(80 μg, i.c.v.), but not an M2 antagonist, AF−DX116(40−80 μg, i.c.v.), disrupted spatial cognition in the 8−arm radial maze task.In brain microdialysis with Ringer’s solution containing 0.1 mM eserine sulfate, scopolamine and AF−DX116, but not pirenzepine, increased ACh release in the VH.Moreover, in the bilateral injection of scopolamine(2 μg/side), the VH and dorsomedial thalamus nucleus were important regions for scopolamine−induced impairment of spatial cognition.A simultaneous determination of the behavioral changes revealed that scopolamine(0.5 mg/kg, i.p.)markedly decreased the ACh contents and also increased the ACh release in all regions tested.Especially, the changes in the ACh release of the VH closely paralleled the induction of the scopolamine−induced impairment of spatial cognition.These results suggest that the blocking balance between M1 and M2 muscarinic receptor in the VH therefore plays a major role in the spatial cognition impairment induced by scopolamine in the 8−arm radial maze task.

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© The Japanese Pharmacological Society 2000
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