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Failure of delayed nonsynaptic neuronal plasticity underlies age-associated long-term associative memory impairment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cognitive decline in aging is linked to subtle neuronal dysfunction rather than widespread cell death, potentially due to oxidative stress affecting neuronal function.
  • In a study using the gastropod Lymnaea stagnalis, young animals showed strong long-term memory (LTM) after conditioning, while older animals did not, correlating with reduced excitability in specific serotonergic neurons (CGCs).
  • Dietary antioxidant α-tocopherol improved neuron function but did not restore LTM, whereas treatment with the SSRI fluoxetine successfully improved both neuronal activity and memory in older animals.

Article Abstract

Background: Cognitive impairment associated with subtle changes in neuron and neuronal network function rather than widespread neuron death is a feature of the normal aging process in humans and animals. Despite its broad evolutionary conservation, the etiology of this aging process is not well understood. However, recent evidence suggests the existence of a link between oxidative stress in the form of progressive membrane lipid peroxidation, declining neuronal electrical excitability and functional decline of the normal aging brain. The current study applies a combination of behavioural and electrophysiological techniques and pharmacological interventions to explore this hypothesis in a gastropod model (Lymnaea stagnalis feeding system) that allows pinpointing the molecular and neurobiological foundations of age-associated long-term memory (LTM) failure at the level of individual identified neurons and synapses.

Results: Classical appetitive reward-conditioning induced robust LTM in mature animals in the first quartile of their lifespan but failed to do so in animals in the last quartile of their lifespan. LTM failure correlated with reduced electrical excitability of two identified serotonergic modulatory interneurons (CGCs) critical in chemosensory integration by the neural network controlling feeding behaviour. Moreover, while behavioural conditioning induced delayed-onset persistent depolarization of the CGCs known to underlie appetitive LTM formation in this model in the younger animals, it failed to do so in LTM-deficient senescent animals. Dietary supplementation of the lipophilic anti-oxidant α-tocopherol reversed the effect of age on CGCs electrophysiological characteristics but failed to restore appetitive LTM function. Treatment with the SSRI fluoxetine reversed both the neurophysiological and behavioural effects of age in senior animals.

Conclusions: The results identify the CGCs as cellular loci of age-associated appetitive learning and memory impairment in Lymnaea and buttress the hypothesis that lipid peroxidation-dependent depression of intrinsic excitability is a hallmark of normal neuronal aging. The data implicate both lipid peroxidation-dependent non-synaptic as well as apparently lipid peroxidation-independent synaptic mechanisms in the age-dependent decline in behavioural plasticity in this model system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3470963PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-13-103DOI Listing

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