Shashoua V E, Hesse G W
Ralph Lowell Laboratories, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, MA 02178.
Brain Res. 1989 Apr 10;484(1-2):333-9. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(89)90377-6.
ELISA measurements showed that brain extracellular fluid (ECF) levels of ependymin decreased for animals that learned to associate a paired presentation of a light stimulus (CS) with the onset of an electric shock (US), whereas no changes were obtained for control goldfish that received the same number of stimuli delivered in a random unpaired order. Studies of the time course of the changes showed an immediate decrease (19%) after training followed by an increase (20%) above baseline by 5 h and a final return to baseline by 25 h. These data extend the findings of previous experiments, which demonstrated a role for ependymin in two training procedures that involved motor learning, to classical conditioning where no motor learning occurs. Thus it appears that ependymin may have a functional role in molecular mechanisms of learning and memory in general.