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The influence of hippocampal dopamine D2 receptor losses on episodic-memory decline across 5 years is moderated by BDNF and KIBRA polymorphisms. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Losses in dopamine functioning may negatively impact cognitive decline with age, particularly affecting episodic memory formation in the hippocampus.
  • Research indicates that older individuals with certain advantageous genetic variations (BDNF and KIBRA polymorphisms) show better episodic memory performance linked to higher dopamine D2 receptor availability.
  • In a longitudinal study, those with fewer beneficial genotypes experienced more memory decline over five years, while individuals with beneficial genotypes maintained memory but showed potential decline when dopamine receptor availability decreased.

Article Abstract

Losses in dopamine (DA) functioning may contribute to aging-related decline in cognition. Hippocampal DA is necessary for successful episodic memory formation. Previously, we reported that higher DA D2 receptor (D2DR) availability in hippocampus is beneficial for episodic memory only in older carriers of more advantageous genotypes of well-established plasticity-related genetic variations, the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF, rs6265) and the kidney and brain expressed protein (KIBRA, rs17070145) polymorphisms. Extending our observations to the longitudinal level, the current data show that individuals with one or no beneficial BDNF and KIBRA genotype (n = 80) decline more in episodic memory across five years, without any contribution of losses in hippocampal D2DR availability to memory decline. Although carriers of two beneficial genotypes (n = 39) did not decline overall in episodic memory, losses of hippocampal D2DR availability were predictive of episodic-memory decline among these individuals. Our findings have implications for interventions targeting DA modulation to enhance episodic memory in aging, which may not benefit all older individuals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2024.01.014DOI Listing

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