Effect of a hallucinogenic serotonin 5 ‐HT2A receptor agonist on visually guided, hippocampal‐dependent spatial cognition in C57BL/6J mice

ABSTRACT By acting on serotonin 5‐HT2A receptors (5‐HT2ARs), serotonergic psychedelic drugs induce perceptual and visual hallucinations by increasing neuronal excitability and altering visual‐evoked neuronal responses. The present study was designed to examine whether the perceptual alterations induced by a serotonergic psychedelic drug would affect the integrity of hippocampal‐dependent, visually guided spatial cognition. phenylalkylamine hallucinogen TCB‐2 is a selective agonist of 5‐HT2ARs. Mice received TCB‐2 (1.0 mg kg−1, i.p.), and spatial behaviors and hippocampal electrophysiological responses were measured with water maze tasks and in vivo single‐unit recording, respectively. TCB‐2 did not affect visual cue approach behavior in the visible platform water maze, but increased the latency of trained mice to initiate goal‐directed swimming during a probe test in the hidden platform Morris water maze, which could be prevented by 5‐HT2AR antagonist MDL 11,939. Interestingly, TCB‐2 did not affect the efficiency of the swim path or the proper use of distal visual cues during the probe test. Hippocampal place cell activity is considered to represent spatial and context‐specific episodic memory. Systemic TCB‐2 did not affect previously established place fields of CA1 neurons in mice exploring a familiar environment, or the remapping of place cells when the mice explored a novel environment. However, TCB‐2 impaired the long‐term stability of p...
Source: Hippocampus - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Research Article Source Type: research