Frick K M, Fernandez S M, Bulinski S C
Department of Psychology, Yale University, P.O. Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Neuroscience. 2002;115(2):547-58. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(02)00377-9.
Estrogen deficiency during menopause is often associated with memory dysfunction. However, inconsistencies regarding the ability of estrogen to improve memory in menopausal women highlight the need to evaluate, in a controlled animal model, the potential for estrogen to alleviate age-related mnemonic decline. The current study tested whether estrogen could ameliorate spatial reference memory decline in aged female mice. At the conclusion of testing, levels of the presynaptic protein synaptophysin, and activities of the synthetic enzymes for acetylcholine and GABA, were measured in the hippocampus and neocortex. Aged (27-28-month-old) female C57BL/6 mice were given daily subcutaneous injections of 1 microg or 5 microg of beta-estradiol-3-benzoate dissolved in sesame oil. Control mice received daily injections of sesame oil or no injections. Estradiol treatment began 5 days prior to behavioral testing and continued throughout testing. Spatial and non-spatial memory were assessed in the Morris water maze. The 5 microg dose of estradiol significantly improved spatial learning and memory in aged females. The performance of 5 microg females improved significantly more rapidly than that of control females; estradiol-treated females performed at asymptotic levels by session 2. Furthermore, 5 microg females exhibited a more robust spatial bias than controls during probe trials. In contrast, 1 microg of estradiol did not improve spatial task performance. Neither dose affected performance of the non-spatial task. In the hippocampus, synaptophysin was increased in 5 microg females relative to controls. Estrogen did not affect enzyme activities in either brain region. This study is the first to examine the effects of estrogen replacement on spatial reference memory and synaptophysin expression in aged post-estropausal female rodents. The results suggest that: (1) estrogen can profoundly improve spatial reference memory in aged females, and (2) this improvement may be related to increased hippocampal synaptic plasticity, but not modulation of the synthetic enzymes for acetylcholine and GABA.
更年期期间的雌激素缺乏常与记忆功能障碍相关。然而,关于雌激素改善绝经后女性记忆能力的研究结果并不一致,这凸显了在可控动物模型中评估雌激素缓解与年龄相关的记忆衰退潜力的必要性。本研究测试了雌激素是否能改善老年雌性小鼠的空间参考记忆衰退。在测试结束时,测量了海马体和新皮质中突触前蛋白突触素的水平,以及乙酰胆碱和γ-氨基丁酸合成酶的活性。对27 - 28月龄的老年雌性C57BL/6小鼠每日皮下注射溶解于芝麻油中的1微克或5微克β-雌二醇-3-苯甲酸酯。对照小鼠每日注射芝麻油或不注射。雌二醇治疗在行为测试前5天开始,并在整个测试过程中持续进行。在莫里斯水迷宫中评估空间和非空间记忆。5微克剂量的雌二醇显著改善了老年雌性小鼠的空间学习和记忆能力。5微克剂量组雌性小鼠的表现比对照组雌性小鼠显著更快地得到改善;接受雌二醇治疗的雌性小鼠在第2次实验时就达到了稳定水平。此外,在探索性实验中,5微克剂量组雌性小鼠表现出比对照组更强的空间偏向性。相比之下,1微克的雌二醇并没有改善空间任务表现。两种剂量均未影响非空间任务的表现。在海马体中,5微克剂量组雌性小鼠的突触素相对于对照组有所增加。雌激素对两个脑区的酶活性均无影响。本研究首次考察了雌激素替代对老年绝经后雌性啮齿动物空间参考记忆和突触素表达的影响。结果表明:(1)雌激素可显著改善老年雌性小鼠的空间参考记忆,(2)这种改善可能与海马体突触可塑性增加有关,而非与乙酰胆碱和γ-氨基丁酸合成酶的调节有关。