Substance P enhancement of passive and active avoidance conditioning in mice
- PMID: 6196793
- DOI: 10.1016/0091-3057(83)90341-6
Substance P enhancement of passive and active avoidance conditioning in mice
Abstract
In a series of seven experiments we explored the effects of peripherally administered substance P on passive and active avoidance conditioning in mice of two genotypes. The peripheral post-trial administration of substance P significantly enhanced the retention of a single-trial passive avoidance task. This effect was dose dependent; 1 ng/g of substance P enhanced the retention of this habit, whereas higher and lower doses were either less effective or ineffective. In heterogeneous strain (HS) mice, substance P administered before training on an active avoidance task did not alter the rate at which these animals learned this habit. However, animals that had been trained with substance P were significantly more resistant to extinction than were animals that had been injected with vehicle. Similarly, C57Bl/6J mice that had been treated with substance P immediately after active avoidance training were more resistant to extinction than were mice that had been given control injections. The enhancement of retention of the passive avoidance habit with substance P was reversed in animals that had been pretreated with naltrexone. Substance P enhancement of the retention of the passive avoidance habit, and its reversal with naltrexone, was observed in both sham operated and adrenalectomized mice.
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