Luine Victoria N, Jacome Luis F, Maclusky Neil J
Department of Psychology, Hunter College, City University of New York, 695 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Endocrinology. 2003 Jul;144(7):2836-44. doi: 10.1210/en.2003-0004.
Estrogenic effects on visual (object recognition) and place (object placement) memory were investigated. Ovariectomized (OVX) rats received acute sc injections 30 min before a sample trial (viewing objects), and 4 h later a recognition/retention trial was performed. During recognition/retention trials, discrimination between sample (old) and new objects (visual memory) or between objects in sample (old) and new locations (place memory) was tested. Subjects given 17alpha- or 17beta-estradiol or diethylstilbestrol (DES) 30 min before sample trials discriminated between objects or locations during recognition/retention trials whereas vehicle-treated, OVX rats did not. Estrogens were given a postsample trial to investigate whether enhancements were due to effects on memory processes or psychological/performance parameters. Hormones were given immediately after or 2 h after sample trials (delayed injections), and recognition/retention were tested 4 h after the sample trial. Both object and place discriminations were enhanced when estrogens were given immediately after sample trials, but not when injections were delayed. These results provide evidence that estrogen rapidly enhances visual and place memory. Moreover, posttraining injections suggest effects on mnemonic processes, consolidation, or encoding, not on performance parameters. Place memory enhancements required higher estrogen doses, both pre- and postsample trial. The rapid time course, stereospecificity of responses (alpha- and beta-estradiol are effective), and efficacy of various estrogens suggest interactions at other than classic estrogen alpha- or beta-receptors in mediating the effects. Thus, these results provide the first demonstration of rapid memory enhancements by estrogen and implicate nongenomic mechanisms, possibly an extranuclear receptor(s), in mediating the response.
研究了雌激素对视觉(物体识别)和空间(物体放置)记忆的影响。对卵巢切除(OVX)大鼠在样本试验(观察物体)前30分钟进行皮下急性注射,4小时后进行识别/保留试验。在识别/保留试验期间,测试样本(旧)物体与新物体(视觉记忆)之间或样本(旧)物体与新位置(空间记忆)之间的辨别能力。在样本试验前30分钟给予17α-或17β-雌二醇或己烯雌酚(DES)的受试者在识别/保留试验期间能够区分物体或位置,而接受赋形剂处理的OVX大鼠则不能。在样本试验后给予雌激素,以研究增强作用是否归因于对记忆过程或心理/行为参数的影响。在样本试验后立即或2小时后给予激素(延迟注射),并在样本试验4小时后测试识别/保留能力。当在样本试验后立即给予雌激素时,物体和空间辨别能力均得到增强,但延迟注射时则没有。这些结果证明雌激素能迅速增强视觉和空间记忆。此外,训练后注射表明雌激素对记忆过程、巩固或编码有影响,而不是对行为参数有影响。空间记忆增强在样本试验前后都需要更高剂量的雌激素。快速的时间进程、反应的立体特异性(α-和β-雌二醇均有效)以及各种雌激素的功效表明,在介导这些作用时,雌激素作用于经典的α-或β-受体之外的其他受体。因此,这些结果首次证明了雌激素能快速增强记忆,并暗示非基因组机制,可能是一种核外受体,介导了这一反应。