Colombo P J, Rivera D T, Martinez J L, Bennett E L, Rosenzweig M R
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, USA.
Behav Neurosci. 1997 Feb;111(1):114-22. doi: 10.1037//0735-7044.111.1.114.
This study examined effects on memory formation produced by [Leu]enkephalin and [Met]enkephalin administration in 2 regions of the 2-day-old chick brain involved in memory formation: the intermediate medial hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV) and the lobus parolfactorius (LPO). Basal concentrations of endogenous [Leu]enkephalin and [Met]enkephalin were determined for 5 brain regions, and effects of 1-trial peck-avoidance training on enkephalin concentrations were examined in the IMHV and LPO. [Leu]enkephalin was amnestic when administered in the IMHV but not in the LPO. In contrast, [Met]enkephalin may be amnestic when administered in the LPO but not in the IMHV. Training decreased [Met]enkephalin concentration in the LPO but not in the IMHV. Training had no effect on [Leu]enkephalin concentration in either the IMHV or the LPO. Thus, amnestic effects of [Leu]- or [Met]enkephalin administration are brain-region specific. Regional activity of endogenous [Met]enkephalin during memory formation is consistent with localized amnestic effects produced by [Met]enkephalin administration.