Author:
Frick Karyn M.,Stearns Nancy A.,Pan Jing-Yu,Berger-Sweeney Joanne
Abstract
The present study compared the effects of environmental enrichment on
spatial memory, glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) activity, and synaptophysin
levels in middle-aged male and female mice. Prior to testing, a subset of
18-month-old male and female C57BL/6 mice was housed with two to three toys
and a running wheel in the home cage for up to 29 d. Adult mice (7 mo) of both
sexes and the remaining middle-aged mice were group (social) housed, but not
exposed to enriching objects. After the enrichment period, all mice were
tested in a 1-day version of the Morris water maze, in which both spatial and
nonspatial memory were assessed. Immediately after testing, the hippocampus
and frontoparietal cortex were dissected, and GAD activity and synaptophysin
levels were measured. Environmental enrichment reduced the age-related
impairment in spatial acquisition and retention; relative to adult social
controls, middle-aged enriched mice were unimpaired, whereas middle-aged
social controls were impaired. This reduction was similar in middle-aged males
and females. Enrichment did not affect cued memory in either sex. Although
hippocampal GAD activity was increased by enrichment in males, all other
neurochemical measurements were unaffected by enrichment or aging in either
sex. These data suggest that environmental enrichment initiated at middle age
can reduce age-related impairments in spatial memory in males and females,
although the underlying neurobiological mechanisms of this effect remain
unknown.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
141 articles.
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