Transient Inactivation of Perirhinal Cortex Disrupts Encoding, Retrieval, and Consolidation of Object Recognition Memory
Open Access
- 5 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 25 (1) , 52-61
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.3827-04.2005
Abstract
Damage to perirhinal cortex (PRh) impairs object recognition memory in humans, monkeys, and rats when tested in tasks such as delayed nonmatching to sample, visual paired comparison, and its rodent analog, the spontaneous object recognition task. In the present study, we have capitalized on the discrete one-trial nature of the spontaneous object recognition task to investigate the role of PRh in several distinct stages of object recognition memory. In a series of experiments, transient inactivation of PRh was accomplished with bilateral infusions of lidocaine directly into PRh immediately before the sample phase (encoding), immediately before the choice phase (retrieval), or within the retention delay after the sample phase (storage-consolidation). Compared with performance on trials in which they received saline infusions, rats were significantly impaired when lidocaine was infused before the sample phase, regardless of the length of the retention delay. Similarly, delay-independent deficits were observed after immediate pre-choice infusions of lidocaine. Finally, PRh inactivation immediately and 20 min after the sample phase, but not 40, 60, or 80 min after, also disrupted subsequent object recognition when the retention delay was sufficiently long to ensure the dissipation of the actions of lidocaine during the choice phase. The effects of pre-sample and pre-choice inactivation indicate involvement of PRh in encoding and retrieval stages of object recognition, and the time course of post-sample inactivation effects suggests a role for PRh in the maintenance of the object trace during memory consolidation.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Presynaptic Activity and Ca2+ Entry Are Required for the Maintenance of NMDA Receptor–Independent LTP at Visual Cortical Excitatory SynapsesJournal of Neurophysiology, 2004
- Evidence concerning how neurons of the perirhinal cortex may effect familiarity discriminationPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Reversible lesions of the rhinal cortex produce delayed non-matching-to-sample deficits in ratsNeuroReport, 2000
- The Neural Response in Short-Term Visual Recognition Memory for Perceptual ConjunctionsNeuroImage, 1998
- Impairment of visual object-discrimination learning after perirhinal cortex ablation.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1997
- Differential effects of lidocaine infusions into the ventral CA1/subiculum or the nucleus accumbens on the acquisition and retention of spatial informationBehavioural Brain Research, 1996
- Consolidation: Fragility on the Road to the EngramNeuron, 1996
- On the development of declarative memory.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1993
- A new one-trial test for neurobiological studies of memory in rats. 1: Behavioral dataBehavioural Brain Research, 1988
- The long and the short of long–term memory—a molecular frameworkNature, 1986