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Chronic treatment of old
rats with donepezil or galantamine: effects on memory, hippocampal plasticity
and nicotinic receptors.
Barnes CA, Meltzer J, Houston F, Orr G, McGann K, Wenk GL.
Arizona Research Laboratories,
Division of Neural Systems
Memory & Aging,
University of Arizona,
384 Life Sciences North Building,
Tucson, AZ 85724, USA.
carol@nsma.arizona.edu
Abstract
The function of the cholinergic system is known to change during normal aging
and in pathological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease. The present study
was designed to assess, within the same group of old animals, the behavioral,
electrophysiological and neurochemical effects of chronic treatment with agents
that increase the function of the cholinergic system through both muscarinic and
nicotinic mechanisms. Doses were determined that produced 60% cholinesterase
inhibition by donepezil and galantamine for the old rats. This was chosen to be
analogous to therapeutic levels achieved for treatment of human Alzheimer's
disease patients with these agents. Because of the well-known age-related
changes in spatial memory and hippocampal synaptic plasticity, spatial working
memory in the radial eight-arm maze and hippocampal long-term potentiation
induction and decay, as well as nicotinic receptor density and affinity, were
measured in old rats implanted with minipumps that delivered donepezil,
galantamine or saline. There was no effect of drug treatment on baseline
synaptic transmission or on the threshold or magnitude of long-term potentiation
induction. Both drug treatment groups, however, showed significantly extended
long-term potentiation decay times at the perforant path-granule cell synapse
over the saline control animals, as measured during the week following
induction. Both drugs also elevated the number of nicotinic receptors within the
hippocampus and neocortex. This is the first demonstration of cholinergic
modulation of synaptic plasticity over the time-course of days. Furthermore, the
durability of long-term potentiation was significantly, positively correlated
with nicotinic receptor binding in the hippocampus. Chronic treatment with
donepezil or galantamine had no significant effect on a well-learned spatial
working memory task on the radial maze.These data suggest that the therapeutic
doses of cholinesterase inhibitors used to treat patients with Alzheimer's
disease may have effects on neurophysiology and neurochemistry that are close to
the threshold for producing detectable behavioral improvements.
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