Effects of anisomycin on inhibitory avoidance in male and female CD1 mice
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How to Cite

Monleón Verdú, S., Arenas Fenollar, M. C., Vinader Caerols, C., Ferrer Añó, A., & Parra Guerrero, A. (2008). Effects of anisomycin on inhibitory avoidance in male and female CD1 mice. Psicothema, 20(Número 3), 456–459. Retrieved from https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/PST/article/view/8682

Abstract

The antibiotic anisomycin inhibits protein synthesis, which much research has suggested is required for the formation of long-term memory. The present work studied the effects of acute subcutaneous administration of anisomycin on the consolidation of memory in an inhibitory avoidance task in CD1 mice of both sexes. The animals were separated by sex and randomly distributed into three groups: two groups were injected with 150 mg/kg anisomycin, one immediately after the training phase and the other 24 h later, while the control group received saline. The interval between training and test was four days. Anisomycin administrated immediately after training produced statistically significant impairment of memory, which was not observed when the drug was administered 24 h after training. No sex differences were observed in the effects of anisomycin. These results extend to female mice the memory impairing effects of anisomycin previously observed in males and endorse the hypothesis that the establishment of long-term memory depends on protein synthesis shortly after training.
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