
Impaired striatum‐dependent behavior in GASP‐1‐knock‐out mice
Author(s) -
Mathis C.,
Bott J.B.,
Candusso M.P.,
Simonin F.,
Cassel J.C.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
genes, brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.315
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1601-183X
pISSN - 1601-1848
DOI - 10.1111/j.1601-183x.2010.00666.x
Subject(s) - neuroscience , striatum , procedural memory , hippocampal formation , dopaminergic , hippocampus , task (project management) , psychology , cognition , dopamine , management , economics
G protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR) associated sorting protein‐1 (GASP‐1) is suspected to play a key role in recycling and degradation of several GPCRs. In a previous study, we have shown that GASP‐1‐knock‐out (GASP‐1‐KO) mice displayed deficits in acquiring a cocaine self‐administration task, associated with an exacerbated down‐regulation of striatal dopaminergic and cholinergic receptors. Among several possibilities, GASP‐1 deficiency could have impaired memory processes underlying the acquisition of the operant conditioning task. Therefore, the present study investigated cognitive performances of GASP‐1‐KO mice and their wild‐type littermates (WT) in a broad variety of memory tasks. Consistent with a deficit in procedural memory, GASP‐1‐KO mice showed delayed acquisition of a food‐reinforced bar‐press task. During water‐maze training in hidden‐ or visible‐platform paradigms, mutant and WT mice acquired the tasks at the same rate. However, GASP‐1 mice exhibited persistent thigmotaxic swimming, longer distance to the platform, and reduced swim speed. There was no deficit in several tasks requiring simple behavioral responses (Barnes maze, object recognition and passive avoidance tasks). Thus, the ability to acquire and/or express complex responses seems affected in GASP‐1‐deficient mice. Hippocampal functions were preserved, as the retention of an acquired memory in spatial tasks remained unaffected. The pattern of behavioral deficits observed in GASP‐1‐KO mice is coherent with current knowledge on the role of striatal GPCRs in acquisition/expression of skilled behavior and in motivation. Together with the previous findings, the so far established phenotype of GASP‐1‐KO mice makes them a potentially exciting tool to study striatal functions.