Hippocampal expression of the orphan nuclear receptor gene hzf-3/nurr1 during spatial discrimination learning

SP de Ortiz, CS Maldonado-Vlaar… - Neurobiology of learning …, 2000 - Elsevier
SP de Ortiz, CS Maldonado-Vlaar, Y Carrasquillo
Neurobiology of learning and memory, 2000Elsevier
The immediate-early gene hzf-3, also known as nurr1, is a member of the inducible orphan
nuclear receptor family and is one candidate in the search for genes associated with
learning and memory processes. Here we report that acquisition of a spatial food search
task is accompanied by elevated levels of hzf-3 mRNA in the hippocampus. Adult male Long–
Evans rats were handled, food-restricted, and allowed to habituate to the maze prior to
training. During acquisition, rats were given one training session per day for 5 days. Each …
The immediate-early gene hzf-3, also known as nurr1, is a member of the inducible orphan nuclear receptor family and is one candidate in the search for genes associated with learning and memory processes. Here we report that acquisition of a spatial food search task is accompanied by elevated levels of hzf-3 mRNA in the hippocampus. Adult male Long–Evans rats were handled, food-restricted, and allowed to habituate to the maze prior to training. During acquisition, rats were given one training session per day for 5 days. Each training session consisted of five trials in which animals searched the maze for food located in 4 of 16 holes in the floor of the maze. Training resulted in spatial acquisition of the task. Northern blot analysis showed significant increases in hippocampal hzf-3 mRNA 3 h after training in the maze. Next, brains were obtained from Naive, Habituated, Day 1, Day 3, and Day 5 animals and processed for in situ hybridization. The results showed significant increases of hzf-3 mRNA in CA1 and CA3 subregions of the dorsal hippocampus during acquisition of the task. We conclude that expression of the hzf-3 gene in the brain is associated with long-term spatial memory processes. The present results are the first to implicate an orphan nuclear receptor in long-term information storage in the hippocampus.
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