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Publication : Ts65Dn mice, a model for Down syndrome, have deficits in context discrimination learning suggesting impaired hippocampal function.

First Author  Hyde LA Year  2001
Journal  Behav Brain Res Volume  118
Issue  1 Pages  53-60
PubMed ID  11163633 Mgi Jnum  J:95717
Mgi Id  MGI:3526840 Doi  10.1016/s0166-4328(00)00313-2
Citation  Hyde LA, et al. (2001) Ts65Dn mice, a model for Down syndrome, have deficits in context discrimination learning suggesting impaired hippocampal function. Behav Brain Res 118(1):53-60
abstractText  The Ts65Dn mouse is segmentally trisomic for a part of mouse chromosome 16 and is a genetic model for Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease. Although many studies have examined the learning and memory processes in Ts65Dn mice, it has yet to be determined if Ts65Dn mice are specifically impaired in learning tasks that require an intact hippocampus. Context discrimination learning is dependent on the dorsal hippocampus in mice. In this task, mice learn to discriminate two similar contexts, one of which is associated with foot shock. In the current study, Ts65Dn mice learned almost identically to what has been reported for mice with dorsal hippocampal lesions, while controls behaved similarly to sham lesioned mice. Therefore, Ts65Dn mice have learning deficits in a hippocampal dependent task that may be related to the loss of cholinergic input to the hippocampus, which occurs after 6 months of age.
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