Cholinergic Mechanisms of Target Oddball Stimuli Detection: The Late “P300-Like” Event-Related Potential in Rats

Joint Authors

Ahnaou, A.
Drinkenburg, W. H.
Biermans, R.

Source

Neural Plasticity

Issue

Vol. 2018, Issue 2018 (31 Dec. 2018), pp.1-15, 15 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2018-10-16

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

15

Main Subjects

Biology
Medicine

Abstract EN

Event-related potentials (ERPs) and oscillations (EROs) provide powerful tools for studying the brain’s synaptic function underlying information processing.

The P300 component of ERPs indexing attention and working memory shows abnormal amplitude and latency in neurological and psychiatric diseases that are sensitive to pharmacological agents.

In the active auditory oddball discriminant paradigm, behavior and auditory-evoked potentials (AEPs) were simultaneously recorded in awake rats to investigate whether P300-like potentials generated in rats responding to rare target oddball tones are sensitive to subcutaneous modulation of the cholinergic tone by donepezil (1 mg/kg) and scopolamine (0.64 mg/kg).

After operant training, rats consistently discriminate rare target auditory stimuli from frequent irrelevant nontarget auditory stimuli by a higher level of correct lever presses (i.e., accuracy) in target trials associated with a food reward.

Donepezil attenuated the disruptive effect of scopolamine on the level of accuracy and premature responses in target trials.

Larger P300-like peaks with early and late components were revealed in correct rare target stimuli trials as compared to frequent tones.

Donepezil enhanced the peak amplitude of the P300-like component to target stimuli and evoked slow theta and gamma oscillations, whereas scopolamine altered the amplitude of the P300-like component and EROs to target stimuli.

Pretreatment with donepezil attenuated effects of scopolamine on the peak amplitude of the P300-like component and on EROs.

This study provides evidence that AEP P300-like responses can be elicited by rats engaged in attentive and memory processing of target stimuli and outline the relevance of the cholinergic system in stimulus discrimination processing.

The findings highlight the sensitivity of this translational index for investigating brain circuits and/or novel pharmacological agents, which modulate cholinergic transmission associated with increased allocation of attentional resources.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Ahnaou, A.& Biermans, R.& Drinkenburg, W. H.. 2018. Cholinergic Mechanisms of Target Oddball Stimuli Detection: The Late “P300-Like” Event-Related Potential in Rats. Neural Plasticity،Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210089

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Ahnaou, A.…[et al.]. Cholinergic Mechanisms of Target Oddball Stimuli Detection: The Late “P300-Like” Event-Related Potential in Rats. Neural Plasticity No. 2018 (2018), pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210089

American Medical Association (AMA)

Ahnaou, A.& Biermans, R.& Drinkenburg, W. H.. Cholinergic Mechanisms of Target Oddball Stimuli Detection: The Late “P300-Like” Event-Related Potential in Rats. Neural Plasticity. 2018. Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210089

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1210089