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Piracetam facilitates long‐term memory for a passive avoidance task in chicks through a mechanism that requires a brain corticosteroid action
Author(s) -
Loscertales María,
Rose Steven P. R.,
Daisley Jonathan N.,
Sandi Carmen
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-9568.1998.00234.x
Subject(s) - piracetam , nootropic , memory consolidation , mineralocorticoid receptor , mineralocorticoid , psychology , glucocorticoid , neuroscience , pharmacology , receptor , chemistry , endocrinology , medicine , hippocampus
We investigated the effects of piracetam, a nootropic, on learning and memory formation for a passive avoidance task in day‐old chicks. To test for the possible cognitive‐enhancing properties of piracetam, a weak learning version of this task – whereby chicks maintain a memory to avoid pecking at a bead coated in a diluted aversant for up to 10 h – was used. Post‐training (5, 30 or 60 min), but not pretraining, injections of piracetam (10 or 50 mg/kg, i.p.) increased recall for the task when the chicks were tested 24 h later. Because previous studies showed that long‐term memory for the passive avoidance task is dependent upon a brain corticosteroid action, and because the efficacy of piracetam‐like compounds is also modulated by corticosteroids, we tested whether the facilitating effect of piracetam was dependent upon a corticosteroid action through specific brain receptors (mineralocorticoid receptor and glucocorticoid receptor). First, increased plasma levels of corticosterone were found 5 min after piracetam injection. In addition, intracerebral administration of antagonists for each receptor type (RU28318, for mineralocorticoid receptors, and RU38486 for glucocorticoid receptors; i.c.) given before the nootropic inhibited the facilitative effect of piracetam on memory consolidation. These results give further support to a modulatory action of piracetam on the mechanisms involved in long‐term memory formation through a neural action that, in this learning model, requires the activation of the two types of intracellular corticosteroid receptors.