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The Effect of Zinc and Zinc Plus Copper on MemoryTizoc Perez-Casillas
Department of Psychology, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia
FURTHER INFORMATION:Tizoc Perez-Casillastperezca@gmu.edu
RESULTS
Figure 4: Cued Extinction percent freezing means across 1st 3 minutes
REFERENCES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS•Age-Related Eye Disease Study Research Group (2002). AREDS report No. 7. Journal of Nutrition, 132(4): 697-702.•Flinn, J.M., Hunter, D., Linkous, D.H., Lanzirotti, A., Smith, L.N., Brightwell, J., & Jones, B.F. (2005). Enhanced dietary zinc consumption in rats causes spatial memory deficits and increased zinc levels within the brain. Physiology and Behavior, 83(5): 793–803.•Prasad, A.S., Brewer, G.J., Schoomaker, E.B., & Rabbani, P. (2007). Hypocupremia induced by zinc therapy in adults. Journal of the American Medical Association, 240, 2166-2168
Dr. Jane FlinnDr. Jim SanfordDr, Linda ChrosniakGretchen Knaack The 2009 Psychology Honors Class!
Figure 5: Cued Extinction tone/shock phase, percent freezing across last 3 minutes
Fear Conditioning Cued Retention (pre-acquisition) Fear Conditioning Cued Extinction (tone/shock phase)
BACKGROUND• Zinc is a fundamental trace metal needed in the body and brain in
order to maintain healthy bodily functions and neurological activity• The National Institute of Health recommends daily consumption of
11mg of zinc for males nineteen and older and 8mg for females that are neither lactating nor pregnant • Zinc is acquired from a normal diet (high in fish and meat products),
through vitamins, and may be subscribed in some cases • The Age-Related Eye Disease Study Research Group (AREDS)
supplemented the elderly with zinc tablets in order to aid in the treatment of advanced macular degeneration (AREDS, 2001), the leading cause of blindness in America
• Although zinc is essential, an excessive consumption could cause copper deficiency (hypocupremia) (Prasad, Brewer, Schoomaker, & Rabbani, 1978). Also, it may lead to a more anxious behavior and cause cognitive impairments when given pre-natally (Flinn et al., 2005)
HYPOTHESIS An increase in zinc dosage in older animals will lead to an increased
anxious behavior and will cause learning and retention impairments, which will be at least partly remediated by copper
METHODS Forty-five, ten-month-old, Long Evans female rats were caged and
maintained for four months on either lab (control) water (n=15), zinc carbonate (10ppm ZnCO3) (n=15), or zinc carbonate plus copper carbonate (10ppm ZnCO3 + 0.2ppm CuCO3) (n=15)
Rats were housed by groups of three in a polycarbonate cage and maintained on a 12 hr light/dark cycle with ad libitum to food and water
Training and subsequent fear conditioning (FC) sessions occurred in 2 identical Plexiglas chambers (Coulbourn Instruments). The “freezing” behavior exhibited by the rats, which implies fear, was recorded by a video camera
Day 1 – Training: FreezeScan 1.0 software (Clever Sys, Inc.) delivered a 20 second tone (85dB) (CS) that co-terminated with a 2-second foot shock (0.8mA) (US) at the end of minutes 3, 4, and 5.
Day 2 – Contextual Conditioning: rats were placed in the same unaltered box as Day 1. No tone nor shock
Day 3-8 – Cued Conditioning and Extinction: rats were placed in an altered FC chamber (metal walls were covered with black stripes and shapes, and Plexiglas and bedding covered the iron grids). The rats were given 160 seconds to acclimate before the CS was presented without the shock.
Day 12 – Cued Extinction: after 8 consecutive days of fear conditioning/extinction, rats were not tested until 4 days later
Days Since TrainingDays Since Training
Cued Fear Conditioning: Trial 1 Cued Fear Conditioning: Trial 6 Cued Fear Conditioning: Trial 7
Figure 1: Day 3- Cued Conditioning, percent freezing across 6 minutes
Figure 2: Day 8- Cued Extinction, percent freezing across 6 minutes
Figure 3: Day 12- Cued Extinction, percent freezing across 6 minutes
MinutesMinutes Minutes
The rats maintained on zinc carbonate seemed more anxious when placed in the FC chamber, as shown by their increased freezing rate Over a period of days, the rats maintained on lab water extinguished fear faster than the other rat groups. The rats maintained on zinc
carbonate extinguished fear at a slower rate in comparison to the other two rat groups
CONCLUSION• An excess ingestion of zinc may cause an increase in anxiousness• Zinc may cause cognitive deficits, specifically to learning and
retention of memory• The deficits of learning and memory retention promoted by zinc
are partly remediated by copper • Due to stress, individuals with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder may
be at a greater risk for developing the cognitive deficits that zinc may induce *Contextual Results Are Not Presented*
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