This study was aimed at determining the type of the glucocorticoid membrane receptors (mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) or glucocorticoid receptors (GRs)) in the dorsal hippocampus (dHPC) involved in the rapid effects of corticosterone or stress on memory retrieval. For that purpose, we synthesized corticosterone–3-O-carboxymethyloxime–bovine serum albumin conjugate (Cort–3CMO–BSA) conjugate (a high MW complex that cannot cross the cell membrane) totally devoid of free corticosterone, stable in physiological conditions. In a first experiment, we evidenced that an acute stress (electric footshocks) induced both a dHPC corticosterone rise measured by microdialysis and memory retrieval impairment on delayed alternation task. Both the endocrinal and cognitive effects of stress were blocked by metyrapone (a corticosterone synthesis inhibitor). In a second experiment, we showed that bilateral injections of either corticosterone or Cort–3CMO–BSA in dHPC 15 min before memory testing produced impairments similar to those resulting from acute stress. Furthermore, we showed that anisomycin (a protein synthesis inhibitor) failed to block the deleterious effect of Cort–3CMO–BSA on memory. In a third experiment, we evidenced that intra-hippocampal injection of RU-28318 (MR antagonist) but not of RU-38486 (GR antagonist) totally blocked the Cort–3CMO–BSA-induced memory retrieval deficit. In a fourth experiment, we demonstrated that RU-28318 administered 15 min before stress blocked the stress-induced memory impairments when behavioral testing occurred 15 min but not 60 min after stress. Overall, this study provides strong in vivo evidence that the dHPC membrane GRs, mediating the rapid and non-genomic effects of acute stress on memory retrieval, are of MR but not GR type.
The present study was aimed at determining the relative contribution of the dorsal (DH)
and ventral (VH) hippocampus in stress-induced memory retrieval impairments. Thus, we
studied the temporal involvement of corticosterone and its receptors, i.e.
mineralocorticoid (MR) and glucocorticoid (GR) in the DH and VH, in relation with the
time-course evolution of stress-induced memory retrieval impairments. In a first
experiment, double microdialysis allowed showing on the same animal that an acute stress
(electric footshocks) induced an earlier corticosterone rise in the DH
(15–60 min post-stress) and then in the VH (90–105 min
post-stress). The return to baseline was faster in the DH (105 min) than in the VH
(120 min). Memory deficits assessed by delayed alternation occurred at 15-, 60-,
and 105-min delays after stress and were closely related to the kinetic of corticosterone
rises within the DH and VH. In a second experiment, the GR antagonist RU-38486 and the MR
antagonist RU-28318 were administered in the DH or VH 15 min before stress.
RU-38486 restored memory at 60 but not at 105 min post-stress delays in the DH,
whereas the opposite pattern was observed in the VH. By contrast, RU-28318 had no effect
on memory impairments at both the 60- and 105-min post-stress delays, showing that MR
receptors are not involved at these delays. However, RU-28318 administered in the DH
restored memory when administered at a shorter post-stress delay (15 min). Overall,
our data are first to evidence that stress induces a functional switch from the DH to VH
via different corticosterone time-course evolutions in these areas and the sequential GR
receptors involvement in the DH and then in the VH, as regards the persistence of
stress-induced memory retrieval deficits over time.
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