Woodruff-Pak_2010_Neurobiol.Aging_31_1032

Reference

Title : Young and older good learners have higher levels of brain nicotinic receptor binding - Woodruff-Pak_2010_Neurobiol.Aging_31_1032
Author(s) : Woodruff-Pak DS , Lehr MA , Li JG , Liu-Chen LY
Ref : Neurobiology of Aging , 31 :1032 , 2010
Abstract :

Neuronal alphabeta heteromeric and alpha7 homomeric nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) were compared in 4- and 27-month rabbits selected for learning proficiency. Sixty 4- and 60 27-month rabbits received the alpha7 nAChR agonist (MEM-3389), galantamine, or vehicle during training in trace eyeblink classical conditioning. Brain tissue from the best and worst young and older learners was analyzed with radioligand binding. Vehicle-treated 4- and 27-month good learners had higher alphabeta heteromeric nAChR binding in hippocampus and temporal-parietal cortex than poor learners, and this result was replicated in both age groups of rabbits treated with galantamine. Results indicate that anatomically more numerous nAChRs or functional activation of a greater number of nAChRs may characterize animals demonstrating optimal learning. During normal aging the expression of high-affinity binding sites declines. Age-related changes in the expression of hippocampal alphabeta heteromeric nAChRs may account for some of the documented age-related impairment in learning. However, individual differences in alphabeta heteromeric nAChRs also exist early in life, as better learning in 4-month rabbits was associated with significantly higher binding.

PubMedSearch : Woodruff-Pak_2010_Neurobiol.Aging_31_1032
PubMedID: 18950900

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Citations formats

Woodruff-Pak DS, Lehr MA, Li JG, Liu-Chen LY (2010)
Young and older good learners have higher levels of brain nicotinic receptor binding
Neurobiology of Aging 31 :1032

Woodruff-Pak DS, Lehr MA, Li JG, Liu-Chen LY (2010)
Neurobiology of Aging 31 :1032