Publications by authors named "Kharouby M"

In humans, memory impairments are highly prevalent in the aged population, but their functional and structural origins are still unknown. We hypothesized that circadian rhythm alterations may predict spatial memory impairment in aged rats. We demonstrate an association between sleep/wake circadian rhythm disturbances (non-REM sleep fragmentation) and spatial memory impairments in aged rats.

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Age-dependent cognitive impairments have been correlated with functional and structural modifications in the hippocampal formation. In particular, the brain endogenous steroid pregnenolone-sulfate (Preg-S) is a cognitive enhancer whose hippocampal levels have been linked physiologically to cognitive performance in senescent animals. However, the mechanism of its actions remains unknown.

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Background: In common with other animal models of psychopathology, the forced-swimming test (FST) suffers from the fact that it involves normal animals. Moreover, powerful antidepressant drugs such as the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have been found to give false negatives in this behavioral test.

Methods: To circumvent these theoretical and practical difficulties, we studied the interindividual variability of the behavioral reactivity of rats in the FST.

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Individual vulnerability to the reinforcing effects of drugs appears to be a crucial factor in the development of addiction in humans. In the rat, individuals at risk for psychostimulant self-administration (SA) may be identified from their locomotor reactivity to a stress situation such as exposure to a novel environment. Animals with high locomotor responses to novelty (high responders, HR) acquire amphetamine SA, while animals with low responses (low responders, LR) do not.

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The behavioral effects of lesions of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM) on two spatial discrimination tasks (place navigation and cross maze) were examined in the rat. These tasks were designed to test reference memory. Lesions by bilateral injection of ibotenic acid into the NBM led to a severe and permanent impairment in the learning of the cross maze task.

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The performance of rats on the conditioned blocking test of learned inattention was measured in a two-way shuttle avoidance task after sham and dopamine (DA)-depleting lesions of the frontal cortex, septum and ventral tegmental area (VTA). Animals were trained on two sessions with tone and/or light as conditioned stimuli. One group was trained with both stimuli on both sessions.

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Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of 29 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 14 normal individuals were investigated for the in vitro production of anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA). Twenty-eight of 29 SLE patients but only one control spontaneously produced ANA in unstimulated PBMC. Pokeweed mitogen induced ANA synthesis in six controls.

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The in vitro production of anti-double stranded DNA antibodies (anti-DNA) by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) was investigated in 19 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and in 12 normal individuals, using a micro solid phase enzyme immunoassay. PBMC from SLE patients spontaneously produced anti-DNA with a higher frequency (16 of 19) than did PBMC of controls (three of 12). In addition SLE patients produced predominantly IgG antibodies.

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