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Publication : Pharmacological blockage and P2X7 deletion hinder aversive memories: reversion in an enriched environment.

First Author  Campos RC Year  2014
Journal  Neuroscience Volume  280
Pages  220-30 PubMed ID  25239372
Mgi Jnum  J:217627 Mgi Id  MGI:5615064
Doi  10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.09.017 Citation  Campos RC, et al. (2014) Pharmacological blockage and P2X7 deletion hinder aversive memories: reversion in an enriched environment. Neuroscience 280:220-30
abstractText  Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) plays a role in cell signaling. It was soon proposed that ATP activates ionotropic P2X receptors, exerting an influence on neurons as well as on glial cells. In addition to the fact that the activation of P2X and P2Y receptors can stimulate or inhibit the release of glutamate from rat hippocampal neurons, the release of ATP has been implicated in hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). Through different behavioral paradigms, this study aimed to investigate the participation of P2X7R in genetically modified (knockout (KO)) mice with the suppressed expression of this receptor and in the pharmacological blockage of this receptor in rats, as well as to evaluate the effect of environmental enrichment on potential mnemonic deficits. The results suggest that P2X7R participates in aversive memory processes: pharmacological blockage with the selective P2X7R antagonist, A-740003, in different time frames elicited dose-dependent impairments in memory acquisition, consolidation and retrieval in rats that were submitted to the contextual fear-conditioning (FC) task, and the deletion of P2X7R hampered the aversive memory processes of mice that were subjected to the FC paradigm. Experiments using mice that were subjected to environmental enrichment suggest that this form of stimulation reverses mnemonic impairments that are ascribed to the absence of the P2X7R, suggesting that these receptors do not participate on such a reversal. Finally, no alterations were observed in the habituation memory of P2X7KO mice.
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