Dissociation of Hippocampal and Striatal Contributions to Spatial Navigation in the Water Maze

Two experiments were conducted to compare the effects of fornix/fimbria and caudate-putamen lesions in Long-Evans hooded rats (Rattus norvegicus) trained on two water maze tasks that differed in the type of spatial localization required for optimum solution. In Experiment 1, the lesioned rats and surgical controls were trained on the standard place task in the water maze (Morris, 1981) and given two postacquisition tests (a platform removal probe and platform relocation test). In Experiment 2, rats with similar lesions and control rats were trained on a modified cue navigation task. Fornix/fimbria lesions impaired a late stage of place task acquisition but did not impair acquisition of the cue task. Caudate-putamen lesions resulted in a severe place acquisition impairment and a transient cue acquisition impairment, both of which were characterized by an initial tendency to swim near the wall of the pool. Post-hoc analyses of the direction and angles of departure from the start points suggested that rats with fornix/fimbria lesions used non-allocentric spatial strategies to solve the place task. These rats also demonstrated a significantly weakened spatial bias for the former training quadrant on the platform removal probe and reduced flexibility in navigating to a novel platform location on the platform relocation test. In contrast, rats with caudate-putamen lesions showed a significant spatial bias for the former training quadrant but failed to cross the exact location within the quadrant where the platform was formerly positioned. The results suggest that the hippocampus mediates the allocentric spatial component of the water maze place task while the dorsomedial striatum may play an important role in the acquisition of the procedural aspects of both place and cue versions of the task.

[1]  W. Mikulas Effects of lights at the choice point on spatial alternation and position learning by normal rats and rats with bilateral lesions of the caudate nucleus , 1966 .

[2]  H. E. Rosvold,et al.  Behavioral effects of selective ablation of the caudate nucleus. , 1967, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[3]  A. Dickinson Contemporary Animal Learning Theory , 1981 .

[4]  R. Hirsh,et al.  The Hippocampus and the Expression of Knowledge , 1982 .

[5]  I. Whishaw Cholinergic receptor blockade in the rat impairs locale but not taxon strategies for place navigation in a swimming pool. , 1985, Behavioral neuroscience.

[6]  R. Kesner,et al.  Spatial cognitive maps: differential role of parietal cortex and hippocampal formation. , 1988, Behavioral Neuroscience.

[7]  R. Kesner,et al.  Caudate nucleus and memory for egocentric localization. , 1988, Behavioral and neural biology.

[8]  M. Packard,et al.  Lesions of the caudate nucleus selectively impair "reference memory" acquisition in the radial maze. , 1990, Behavioral and neural biology.

[9]  J. D. McGaugh,et al.  Double dissociation of fornix and caudate nucleus lesions on acquisition of two water maze tasks: further evidence for multiple memory systems. , 1992, Behavioral neuroscience.

[10]  I. Whishaw,et al.  Rats with fimbria-fornix lesions display a place response in a swimming pool: a dissociation between getting there and knowing where , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.