Endothelin-1-induced mini-stroke in the dorsal hippocampus or
lateral amygdala results in deficits in learning and memory
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Abstract
Functional and structural alterations in brain connectivity associated with brain ischemia have been extensively
studied. However, the mechanism whereby local ischemia in deep brain region affect brain functions is still
unknown. Here, we first established a mini-stroke model by infusion of endothelin-1 (ET-1) into the dorsal hippocampus
or the lateral amygdala, and then investigated how these mini-infarcts affected brain functions associated
with these regions. We found that rats with ET-1 infusion showed deficit in recall of contextual fear memory, but
not in learning process and recall of tone fear memory. In novel object task, ET-1 in the hippocampus also eliminated
object identity memory. ET-1 in the lateral amygdale affected acquisition of fear conditioning and disrupted
retention of tone-conditioned fear, but did not impair retention of contextual fear. These findings suggest that ET-1-
induced mini-infarct in deep brain area leads to functional deficits in learning and memory associated with these
regions.
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