TY - JOUR
T1 - Premarin improves memory, prevents scopolamine-induced amnesia and increases number of basal forebrain choline acetyltransferase positive cells in middle-aged surgically menopausal rats
AU - Acosta, Jazmin I.
AU - Mayer, Loretta
AU - Talboom, Joshua S.
AU - Zay, Cynthia
AU - Scheldrup, Melissa
AU - Castillo, Jonathan
AU - Demers, Laurence M.
AU - Enders, Craig K.
AU - Bimonte-Nelson, Heather
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by grants awarded to HAB-N from the National Institute on Aging, Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Research Foundation, state of Arizona, ADHS, Alzheimer's Disease Core Center Pilot grant program, Institute for Mental Health Research and to JA from the American Psychological Association Diversity Program in Neuroscience Predoctoral Fellowship. We thank Dr. Matthew Quintero, Dr. Lei Lei, Elizabeth Engler, Ian Crain, Candy Tsang, Bronson Bowman, Therry The and Anthony Blome for their excellent assistance, and Heidi Miers for her resourcefulness. We are also indebted to Dr. James Simpkins for his guidance regarding the hormone doses, Dr. Gene Alexander and Dr. Clark Presson for the discussion of the interference trials, as well as Dr. Jill Daniel and Dr. Gary Dohanich for the advisement on the scopolamine dose. We are grateful to Dr. Ravinder Singh (Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN) for performing the hormone assays by LC/MSMS. The authors have no commercial relationship with Wyeth Pharmaceuticals.
PY - 2009/3
Y1 - 2009/3
N2 - Conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) is the most commonly prescribed estrogen therapy, and is the estrogen used in the Women's Health Initiative study. While in-vitro studies suggest that CEE is neuroprotective, no study has evaluated CEE's effects on a cognitive battery and brain immunohistochemistry in an animal model. The current experiment tested whether CEE impacted: I) spatial learning, reference memory, working memory and long-term retention, as well as ability to handle mnemonic delay and interference challenges; and, II) the cholinergic system, via pharmacological challenge during memory testing and ChAT-immunoreactive cell counts in the basal forebrain. Middle-aged ovariectomized (Ovx) rats received chronic cyclic injections of either Oil (vehicle), CEE-Low (10 μg), CEE-Medium (20 μg) or CEE-High (30 μg) treatment. Relative to the Oil group, all three CEE groups showed less overnight forgetting on the spatial reference memory task, and the CEE-High group had enhanced platform localization during the probe trial. All CEE groups exhibited enhanced learning on the spatial working memory task, and CEE dose-dependently protected against scopolamine-induced amnesia with every rat receiving the highest CEE dose maintaining zero errors after scopolamine challenge. CEE also increased number of ChAT-immunoreactive neurons in the vertical diagonal band of the basal forebrain. Neither the ability to remember after a delay nor interference, nor long-term retention, was influenced by the CEE regimen used in this study. These findings are similar to those reported previously for 17 β-estradiol, and suggest that CEE can provide cognitive benefits on spatial learning, reference and working memory, possibly through cholinergic mechanisms.
AB - Conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) is the most commonly prescribed estrogen therapy, and is the estrogen used in the Women's Health Initiative study. While in-vitro studies suggest that CEE is neuroprotective, no study has evaluated CEE's effects on a cognitive battery and brain immunohistochemistry in an animal model. The current experiment tested whether CEE impacted: I) spatial learning, reference memory, working memory and long-term retention, as well as ability to handle mnemonic delay and interference challenges; and, II) the cholinergic system, via pharmacological challenge during memory testing and ChAT-immunoreactive cell counts in the basal forebrain. Middle-aged ovariectomized (Ovx) rats received chronic cyclic injections of either Oil (vehicle), CEE-Low (10 μg), CEE-Medium (20 μg) or CEE-High (30 μg) treatment. Relative to the Oil group, all three CEE groups showed less overnight forgetting on the spatial reference memory task, and the CEE-High group had enhanced platform localization during the probe trial. All CEE groups exhibited enhanced learning on the spatial working memory task, and CEE dose-dependently protected against scopolamine-induced amnesia with every rat receiving the highest CEE dose maintaining zero errors after scopolamine challenge. CEE also increased number of ChAT-immunoreactive neurons in the vertical diagonal band of the basal forebrain. Neither the ability to remember after a delay nor interference, nor long-term retention, was influenced by the CEE regimen used in this study. These findings are similar to those reported previously for 17 β-estradiol, and suggest that CEE can provide cognitive benefits on spatial learning, reference and working memory, possibly through cholinergic mechanisms.
KW - Estrogen
KW - Hormone replacement
KW - Learning
KW - Reference memory
KW - Spatial memory
KW - Working memory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=61749097740&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=61749097740&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2008.11.008
DO - 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2008.11.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 19101559
AN - SCOPUS:61749097740
SN - 0018-506X
VL - 55
SP - 454
EP - 464
JO - Hormones and Behavior
JF - Hormones and Behavior
IS - 3
ER -