Memory Impairment and Reduced Exploratory Behavior in Mice after Administration of Systemic Morphine

Author:

Kitanaka Junichi12,Kitanaka Nobue12,Hall F. Scott3,Fujii Mei14,Goto Akiko14,Kanda Yusuke14,Koizumi Akira14,Kuroiwa Hirotoshi14,Mibayashi Satoko14,Muranishi Yumi14,Otaki Soichiro14,Sumikawa Minako14,Tanaka Koh-Ichi5,Nishiyama Nobuyoshi56,Uhl George R.7,Takemura Motohiko1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, Hyogo College of Medicine, Hyogo, Japan.

2. These authors contributed equally to this study.

3. Department of Pharmacology, College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, USA.

4. These authors listed in alphabetical order contributed equally to this study as medical students participating in an orientation course for medical sciences (2011, 2012) held in the Department of Pharmacology, Hyogo College of Medicine.

5. Division of Pharmacology, Department of Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, Hyogo University of Health Sciences, Hyogo, Japan.

6. School of Pharmacy, Hyogo University of Health Sciences, Hyogo, Japan.

7. Molecular Neurobiology Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse–-Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Abstract

In the present study, the effects of morphine were examined on tests of spatial memory, object exploration, locomotion, and anxiety in male ICR mice. Administration of morphine (15 or 30 mg/kg, intraperitoneally (i.p.)) induced a significant decrease in Y-maze alternations compared to saline vehicle-treated mice. The reduced Y-maze alternations induced by morphine were completely blocked by naloxone (15 mg/kg) or β-funaltrexamine (5 mg/kg) but not by norbinaltorphimine (5 mg/kg) or naltrindole (5 mg/kg), suggesting that the morphine-induced spatial memory impairment was mediated predominantly by jl-opioid receptors (MOPs). Significant spatial memory retrieval impairments were observed in the Morris water maze (MWM) in mice treated with morphine (15 mg/kg) or scopolamine (1 mg/kg), but not with naloxone or morphine plus naloxone. Reduced exploratory time was observed in mice after administration of morphine (15 mg/kg), in a novel-object exploration test, without any changes in locomotor activity. No anxiolytic-like behavior was observed in morphine-treated mice in the elevated plus maze. A significant reduction in buried marbles was observed in morphine-treated mice measured in the marble-burying test, which was blocked by naloxone. These observations suggest that morphine induces impairments in spatial short-term memory and retrieval, and reduces exploratory behavior, but that these effects are not because of overall changes in locomotion or anxiety.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Neuroscience

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