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Differential effects of post-training scopolamine on spatial and non-spatial learning tasks in mice

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Muscarinic antagonist scopolamine has been extensively used to model amnesia in lab rodents, but most studies have focused on the effects of pre-training scopolamine administration. Here, we examined post-training scopolamine administration in C57BL/6JRj mice. Learning was assessed in three different procedures: odour discrimination in a digging paradigm, visual discrimination in a touchscreen-based setup, and spatial learning in the Morris water maze. Scopolamine administration affected performance in the odour discrimination task. More specifically, scopolamine decreased perseverance, which facilitated reversal learning. Similar results were obtained in the visual discrimination task, but scopolamine did not affect performance in the spatial learning task. It is unlikely that these results can be explained by non-memory-related cognitive effects (e.g., attention), non-cognitive behaviours (e.g., locomotor activity) or peripheral side-effects (e.g., mydriasis). They likely relate to the various neuropharmacological actions of scopolamine.

Tijdschrift: Brain Research Bulletin
ISSN: 0361-9230
Volume: 152
Pagina's: 52-62
Jaar van publicatie:2019
Trefwoorden:Odour discrimination, Post-training effects, Reversal learning, Scopolamine, Spatial learning, Visual discrimination