Abstract
The effects of alaproclate and zimeldine on memory retrieval were examined in male Swiss Webster mice using a one-trial inhibitory avoidance task. All drugs were administered IP prior to the retention test 24 h after training. Both drugs were found to facilitate memory retrieval significantly in a dose-and time-dependent fashion that could not be explained in terms of non-specific effects of the drug (illness, lack of motility, etc.) at the time of the test. The temporal effects of alaproclate and zimeldine on memory closely followed their course of concentration of the drug within the blood stream. The facilitation of retrieval induced by alaproclate and zimeldine was blocked by the putative serotonergic receptor agonist quipazine but not blocked by the antagonist cyproheptadine. Pretreatment with quipazine alone in a group of animals trained to a shock level which normally results in high levels of suppression was not sufficient to produce memory impairment, suggesting that quipazine was probably antagonizing the facilitative effects of alaproclate and zimeldine directly, rather than overriding the facilitation through an indirect action on retrieval in general. The present results lend further support to the suggestion that serotonin plays a significant role in memory.
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Altman, H.J., Nordy, D.A. & Ögren, S.O. Role of serotonin in memory: facilitation by alaproclate and zimeldine. Psychopharmacology 84, 496–502 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00431456
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00431456