Features
- Format: HTML
- Printable: Yes
- Mac OS Compatible: Yes
- Windows Compatible: Yes
- Handheld Compatible: Yes
- Digital: 7 pages
- Published by: Elsevier July 1, 2006
Product Description
This digital document is a journal article from Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: Calcium signalling is an important process underlying neuronal function and consequently behaviour. The release of calcium from intracellular stores via the ryanodine receptor calcium release (RyR) channel has been implicated in both synaptic plasticity and to a limited extent in memory processing. While past investigations have suggested a role for RyR channels in long-term memory, the present study suggests their action is more complex. Using a single trial passive avoidance task developed for the day-old chick, it is proposed that RyR channels are necessary both prior to the expression of long-term memory and also in retrieval processes. Specifically, 5mM dantrolene (a specific RyR channel blocker) resulted in a persistent retention loss from 40min post-training while 10nM dantrolene produced a transient retention loss centred at 40min post-training. We speculate that in the context of memory formation, RyR channels may be activated by nitric oxide and in the context of memory retrieval may lead to the activation of large conductance calcium-activated potassium BK"C"a channels which, when blocked by 50nM iberiotoxin, also demonstrated a transient retention loss centred at 40min post-training.