Newhouse Paul, Dumas Julie
Center for Cognitive Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA; Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Veterans Affairs Tennessee Valley Health System, Nashville, TN, USA.
Clinical Neuroscience Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, VT, USA.
Horm Behav. 2015 Aug;74:173-85. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2015.06.022. Epub 2015 Jul 14.
This article is part of a Special Issue "Estradiol and Cognition". While many studies in humans have investigated the effects of estrogen and hormone therapy on cognition, potential neurobiological correlates of these effects have been less well studied. An important site of action for estrogen in the brain is the cholinergic system. Several decades of research support the critical role of CNS cholinergic systems in cognition in humans, particularly in learning and memory formation and attention. In humans, the cholinergic system has been implicated in many aspects of cognition including the partitioning of attentional resources, working memory, inhibition of irrelevant information, and improved performance on effort-demanding tasks. Studies support the hypothesis that estradiol helps to maintain aspects of attention and verbal and visual memory. Such cognitive domains are exactly those modulated by cholinergic systems and extensive basic and preclinical work over the past several decades has clearly shown that basal forebrain cholinergic systems are dependent on estradiol support for adequate functioning. This paper will review recent human studies from our laboratories and others that have extended preclinical research examining estrogen-cholinergic interactions to humans. Studies examined include estradiol and cholinergic antagonist reversal studies in normal older women, examinations of the neural representations of estrogen-cholinergic interactions using functional brain imaging, and studies of the ability of selective estrogen receptor modulators such as tamoxifen to interact with cholinergic-mediated cognitive performance. We also discuss the implications of these studies for the underlying hypotheses of cholinergic-estrogen interactions and cognitive aging, and indications for prophylactic and therapeutic potential that may exploit these effects.
本文是《雌二醇与认知》特刊的一部分。虽然许多针对人类的研究调查了雌激素和激素疗法对认知的影响,但这些影响潜在的神经生物学关联却较少得到充分研究。雌激素在大脑中的一个重要作用部位是胆碱能系统。数十年的研究支持中枢神经系统胆碱能系统在人类认知中,尤其是在学习、记忆形成和注意力方面的关键作用。在人类中,胆碱能系统与认知的许多方面有关,包括注意力资源的分配、工作记忆、无关信息的抑制以及在需要努力的任务上表现的改善。研究支持这样一种假说,即雌二醇有助于维持注意力以及言语和视觉记忆方面。这些认知领域恰恰是由胆碱能系统调节的,并且在过去几十年中广泛的基础和临床前研究清楚地表明,基底前脑胆碱能系统依赖于雌二醇的支持才能正常运作。本文将回顾我们实验室及其他机构最近的人体研究,这些研究将关于雌激素 - 胆碱能相互作用的临床前研究扩展到了人类。所考察的研究包括对正常老年女性进行的雌二醇和胆碱能拮抗剂逆转研究、使用功能性脑成像检查雌激素 - 胆碱能相互作用的神经表征,以及对他莫昔芬等选择性雌激素受体调节剂与胆碱能介导的认知表现相互作用能力的研究。我们还将讨论这些研究对胆碱能 - 雌激素相互作用及认知衰老潜在假说的意义,以及可能利用这些效应的预防和治疗潜力的指征。