A reduction in alpha5 subunit-containing gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptors has been reported to enhance some forms of learning in mutant mouse models. This effect has been attributed to impaired alpha5 GABAA receptor-mediated inhibitory modulation in the hippocampus. The introduction of a point mutation (H105R) in the alpha5 subunit is associated with a specific reduction of alpha5 subunit-containing GABAA receptors in the hippocampus. The present study examined the modulation of associative learning and the extinction of conditioned response in these animals. The strength of classical conditioning can be weakened when a trace interval is interposed between the conditioned stimulus and unconditioned stimulus. Here we report that this 'trace effect' in classical conditioning was absent in the mutant mice--they were insensitive to the imposition of a 20-s trace interval. This effect of the mutation was most clearly in the female mice using an aversive conditioning paradigm, and in the male mice using an appetitive conditioning paradigm. These gender-specific phenotypes were accompanied by a resistance to extinction of conditioned fear response in the mutant mice that was apparent in both genders. Our results identify neuronal inhibition in the hippocampus mediated via alpha5 GABAA receptors as a critical control element in the regulation of the acquisition and expression of associative memory.
Serotonin transporter and monoamine oxidase (MAO) A are involved in the inactivation of serotonin. The former is responsible for serotonin re-uptake from the synapse, whereas the latter catalyzes serotonin deamination in presynaptic terminals. Expression of serotonin transporter and MAO A genes was investigated in raphe nuclei of midbrain of CBA/Lac male mice with repeated experience of social victories or defeats in 10 daily aggressive confrontations. The amount of cDNA of these genes was evaluated using multiplex RT-PCR. Two independent experiments revealed that the defeated mice were characterized by significantly higher levels of serotonin transporter and MAO A mRNAs than the control and aggressive animals. Increased expression of MAO A and serotonin transporter genes is suggested to reflect the accelerated serotonin degradation in response to activation of the serotonergic system functioning induced by social stress. Significant positive correlation between MAO A and serotonin transporter mRNA levels suggests common pathways of regulation of transcriptional activity of these genes.
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