Differential effects of NMDA-induced lesions into the insular cortex and amygdala on the acquisition and evocation of conditioned immunosuppression
Por:
Ramírez-Amaya V., Alvarez-Borda B., Bermudez-Rattoni F.
Publicada:
1 ene 1998
Resumen:
It has been established that the insular cortex (IC) mediates conditioned taste aversion, and recently we have demonstrated that lesions of this structure disrupt the acquisition of conditioned immunosuppression (CIS). The IC is functionally and reciprocally interconnected with the amygdala (AM) which has been suggested to be involved in neural-immune interactions. The aim of this work was to test the effects of NMDA-induced lesions in either the IC or AM in the acquisition (lesions made before conditioning) and evocation (lesions made after conditioning) of a conditioned immunosuppression task, obtained by one single pairing of saccharin taste and the immunosuppressive drug, cyclophosphamide. AM and IC lesioned rats were separated into four groups: the first two received lesions before and the other two were lesioned after the acquisition of conditioned immunosuppression. Twenty days after conditioning, animals were reexposed to saccharin and immunized with ovalbumin. After immunization, blood samples were taken, and analyzed by ELISA. The results showed that IC lesions disrupted the acquisition and evocation of CTA and CIS. Conversely, AM lesions disrupted only the acquisition of CIS. These data suggest that the IC is involved in the neural mechanisms underlying the acquisition and evocation of conditioned immunosuppression, and the amygdala could be important in mediating the input of the immune information necessary for the acquisition of conditioned immunosuppression.
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