|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Dissecting spatial knowledge from spatial choice by hippocampal NMDA receptor deletion.

First Author  Bannerman DM Year  2012
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  15
Issue  8 Pages  1153-9
PubMed ID  22797694 Mgi Jnum  J:187062
Mgi Id  MGI:5435170 Doi  10.1038/nn.3166
Citation  Bannerman DM, et al. (2012) Dissecting spatial knowledge from spatial choice by hippocampal NMDA receptor deletion. Nat Neurosci 15(8):1153-9
abstractText  Hippocampal NMDA receptors (NMDARs) and NMDAR-dependent synaptic plasticity are widely considered crucial substrates of long-term spatial memory, although their precise role remains uncertain. Here we show that Grin1(DeltaDGCA1) mice, lacking GluN1 and hence NMDARs in all dentate gyrus and dorsal CA1 principal cells, acquired the spatial reference memory water maze task as well as controls, despite impairments on the spatial reference memory radial maze task. When we ran a spatial discrimination water maze task using two visually identical beacons, Grin1(DeltaDGCA1) mice were impaired at using spatial information to inhibit selecting the decoy beacon, despite knowing the platform's actual spatial location. This failure could suffice to impair radial maze performance despite spatial memory itself being normal. Thus, these hippocampal NMDARs are not essential for encoding or storing long-term, associative spatial memories. Instead, we demonstrate an important function of the hippocampus in using spatial knowledge to select between alternative responses that arise from competing or overlapping memories.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

11 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression