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Abstract
Adult hippocampal neurogenesis has been linked to learning but details of the relationship
between neuronal production and memory formation remain unknown. Using low dose irradiation
to inhibit adult hippocampal neurogenesis we show that new neurons aged 4-28 days
old at the time of training are required for long-term memory in a spatial version
of the water maze. This effect of irradiation was specific since long-term memory
for a visibly cued platform remained intact. Furthermore, irradiation just before
or after water maze training had no effect on learning or long-term memory. Relationships
between learning and new neuron survival, as well as proliferation, were investigated
but found non-significant. These results suggest a new role for adult neurogenesis
in the formation and/or consolidation of long-term, hippocampus-dependent, spatial
memories.