Department of Psychiatry, University of California, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
Learn Mem. 2009 Dec 22;17(1):5-11. doi: 10.1101/lm.1650110. Print 2010 Jan.
In rodents, the novel object recognition task (NOR) has become a benchmark task for assessing recognition memory. Yet, despite its widespread use, a consensus has not developed about which brain structures are important for task performance. We assessed both the anterograde and retrograde effects of hippocampal lesions on performance in the NOR task. Rats received 12 5-min exposures to two identical objects and then received either bilateral lesions of the hippocampus or sham surgery 1 d, 4 wk, or 8 wk after the final exposure. On a retention test 2 wk after surgery, the 1-d and 4-wk hippocampal lesion groups exhibited impaired object recognition memory. In contrast, the 8-wk hippocampal lesion group performed similarly to controls, and both groups exhibited a preference for the novel object. These same rats were then given four postoperative tests using unique object pairs and a 3-h delay between the exposure phase and the test phase. Hippocampal lesions produced moderate and reliable memory impairment. The results suggest that the hippocampus is important for object recognition memory.
在啮齿动物中,新颖物体识别任务(NOR)已成为评估识别记忆的基准任务。然而,尽管它被广泛应用,但对于哪些大脑结构对于任务表现很重要,尚未达成共识。我们评估了海马损伤对 NOR 任务表现的顺行和逆行影响。大鼠接受了 12 次 5 分钟的两个相同物体暴露,然后在最后一次暴露后 1 天、4 周或 8 周接受双侧海马损伤或假手术。在手术后 2 周的保留测试中,1 天和 4 周海马损伤组表现出物体识别记忆受损。相比之下,8 周海马损伤组的表现与对照组相似,两组均表现出对新物体的偏好。然后,这些相同的大鼠接受了四个使用独特物体对和暴露阶段和测试阶段之间 3 小时延迟的术后测试。海马损伤导致中度且可靠的记忆损伤。结果表明,海马对于物体识别记忆很重要。