AI Article Synopsis

  • Global cerebral ischemia affects working memory in rats, shown by performance deficits in an eight-arm radial maze, despite no significant loss of pyramidal neurons in the prefrontal cortex.
  • Melatonin treatment prevents these memory impairments, indicating its neuroprotective properties.
  • Structural analyses of pyramidal neurons reveal reductions in soma size, dendritic length, bifurcation numbers, and spine density after ischemia, but these changes are mitigated by melatonin, suggesting that these structural alterations are linked to working memory disruptions.

Article Abstract

Global cerebral ischemia induces alterations of working memory, as evidenced in the eight-arm radial maze, in the absence of significant changes of pyramidal neuron population in the prefrontal cortex. These alterations can be prevented by a neuroprotective melatonin treatment. Thus, the cytoarchitectonic characteristics of the pyramidal neurons located at layers III and V in the prefrontal cortex of rats that had been submitted 120 days earlier to acute global cerebral ischemia (15 min four-vessel occlusion), and melatonin (10 mg/(kgh) for 6h, i.v.) or vehicle administration, starting 30min after the end of cerebral blood flow interruption, were evaluated in order to gain information on the changes of the neural substrate underlying disruption of prefrontocortical functioning. Soma size, rough length and number of bifurcations of basilar and apical dendrites, as well as spine density and proportions of the different types of spines in a 50 microm length segment of a secondary dendrite branching from the apical and the basilar dendrites, of pyramidal neurons of the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex, were evaluated in Golgi material. A significant reduction of soma size, apical and basilar dendrite length, number of dendritic bifurcations, and spine density were observed in pyramidal neurons at layers III and V after cerebral ischemia, while these alterations were prevented by melatonin treatment. These cytoarchitectural differences between groups seem to underlie the observed alterations in spatial working memory of ischemic, vehicle-treated rats in the absence of pyramidal neuron loss, as well as the better display of these functions long after ischemia and melatonin neuroprotection.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2008.10.043DOI Listing

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