Cholinergic modulation of rearing in rats performing a spatial memory task

Author:

Cassity Skylar12,Choi Irene Jungyeon1,Gregory Billy Howard1,Igbasanmi Adeleke Malik1,Bickford Sarah Cristi1,Moore Kiara Tyanni1,Seraiah Anna Elisabeth3,Layfield Dylan14,Newman Ehren Lee14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences Indiana University Bloomington Bloomington Indiana USA

2. Program in Neuroscience, College of Arts and Sciences Indiana University Bloomington Bloomington Indiana USA

3. Princeton Neuroscience Institute Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA

4. Intelligent Systems Engineering, Luddy School of Informatics Computing and Engineering University Bloomington Bloomington Indiana USA

Abstract

AbstractSpatial memory encoding depends in part on cholinergic modulation. How acetylcholine supports spatial memory encoding is not well understood. Prior studies indicate that acetylcholine release is correlated with exploration, including epochs of rearing onto hind legs. Here, to test whether elevated cholinergic tone increases the probability of rearing, we tracked rearing frequency and duration while optogenetically modulating the activity of choline acetyltransferase containing (i.e., acetylcholine producing) neurons of the medial septum in rats performing a spatial working memory task (n = 17 rats). The cholinergic neurons were optogenetically inhibited using halorhodopsin for the duration that rats occupied two of the four open arms during the study phase of an 8‐arm radial arm maze win‐shift task. Comparing rats' behaviour in the two arm types showed that rearing frequency was not changed, but the average duration of rearing epochs became significantly longer. This effect on rearing was observed during optogenetic inhibition but not during sham inhibition or in rats that received infusions of a fluorescent reporter virus (i.e., without halorhodopsin; n = 6 rats). Optogenetic inhibition of cholinergic neurons during the pretrial waiting phase had no significant effect on rearing, indicating a context‐specificity of the observed effects. These results are significant in that they indicate that cholinergic neuron activity in the medial septum is correlated with rearing not because it motivates an exploratory state but because it contributes to the processing of information acquired while rearing.

Funder

Indiana University Bloomington

Lilly Endowment

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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