Disconnection of the perirhinal and insular cortices severely disrupts taste neophobia
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Jiménez Ramos, Juan ManuelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Perirhinal cortex Insular cortex Medial temporal lobe Neophobia Taste learning
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Juan M. J. Ramos. Disconnection of the perirhinal and insular cortices severely disrupts taste neophobia. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 175 (2020) 107324. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nlm.2020.107324]
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Madrid, Spain); European Regional Development Fund – ERDF (PSI2013-41098-P)Abstract
It is well known that the perirhinal (Prh) and insular (IC) cortices are reciprocally connected,
mainly through ipsilateral projections. Although some studies have demonstrated that
excitotoxic lesions to these regions, each separately, disrupt taste neophobia, it is not yet known
whether the two regions have functional interactions with one another. To find out if they form
a functional unit, we examined the effects of crossed excitotoxic lesions to the Prh and the
contralateral IC (contralateral group). This group's performance was compared to that of rats
with ipsilateral Prh and IC lesions (ipsilateral group) and to that of control-operated rats. All the
animals received a 0.3% saccharin solution for fifteen minutes on five consecutive days. Rats
with contralateral Prh-IC lesions drank significantly higher amounts of saccharin than the other
groups during the first encounter with the novel taste, indicating a disruption in neophobia.
However, the lesions did not disrupt attenuation of neophobia, with the contralateral group
reaching asymptote in trial 2 and the rest of the groups after 3-5 days of exposure to the
saccharin. These findings suggest that both Prh and IC play a necessary role in taste neophobia.
Additionally, the two cortices function interdependently and their interaction is critical for
normal expression of taste neophobia.