Title : Improvement of episodic contextual memory by S 18986 in middle-aged mice: comparison with donepezil - Beracochea_2007_Psychopharmacology.(Berl)_193_63 |
Author(s) : Beracochea D , Philippin JN , Meunier S , Morain P , Bernard K |
Ref : Psychopharmacology (Berl) , 193 :63 , 2007 |
Abstract :
INTRODUCTION: This study compared the effects of S 18986, a positive allosteric modulator of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA)-type glutamate receptors, to those of donepezil a cholinesterase inhibitor on memory impairments induced by ageing in a contextual serial discrimination (CSD) task in middle-aged mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The CSD task involved the learning of two consecutive discriminations in a four-hole board, each performed on two different floors. This model has been developed to study simultaneously different forms of memory in mice (i.e., episodic-like vs semantic-like forms of memory). We showed that placebo-middle-aged mice (14-15 months old) and placebo-aged subjects (19-20 months old) exhibited a severe memory deficit for the first but not the second discrimination, which was due to an increase in interference, as compared with placebo-treated young mice (5 months old). Middle-aged mice were given (9 days) per os administration of either donepezil, S 18986, or placebo. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Both 0.3 mg/kg donepezil and 0.1 mg/kg S 18986 reversed the deficit of middle-aged mice through a significant increase in contextually correct responses and in parallel a tendency to reduce interfering responses. CONCLUSION: Overall, S 18986 emerges as having a beneficial impact on contextual memory processes in middle-aged mice. |
PubMedSearch : Beracochea_2007_Psychopharmacology.(Berl)_193_63 |
PubMedID: 17384936 |
Beracochea D, Philippin JN, Meunier S, Morain P, Bernard K (2007)
Improvement of episodic contextual memory by S 18986 in middle-aged mice: comparison with donepezil
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
193 :63
Beracochea D, Philippin JN, Meunier S, Morain P, Bernard K (2007)
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
193 :63