69 research outputs found
Chronic Restraint Stress Induces an Isoform-Specific Regulation on the Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule in the Hippocampus
Existing evidence indicates that 21-days
exposure of rats to restraint stress induces
dendritic atrophy in pyramidal cells of the
hippocampus. This phenomenon has been
related to altered performance in hippocampal-dependent
learning tasks. Prior studies have
shown that hippocampal expression of cell
adhesion molecules is modified by such stress
treatment, with the neural cell adhesion molecule
(NCAM) decreasing and L1 increasing, their
expression, at both the mRNA and protein
levels. Given that NCAM comprises several
isoforms, we investigated here whether chronic
stress might differentially affect the expression
of the three major isoforms (NCAM-120,
NCAM-140, NCAM-180) in the hippocampus.
In addition, as glucocorticoids have been
implicated in the deleterious effects induced by
chronic stress, we also evaluated plasma
corticosterone levels and the hippocampal
expression of the corticosteroid mineralocorticoid
receptor (MR) and glucocorticoid
receptor (GR). The results showed that the
protein concentration of the NCAM-140
isoform decreased in the hippoampus of
stressed rats. This effect was isoform-specific,
because NCAM-120 and NCAM-180 levels were
not significantly modified. In addition, whereas
basal levels of plasma corticosterone tended to
be increased, MR and GR concentrations were
not significantly altered. Although possible
changes in NCAM-120, NCAM-180 and
corticosteroid receptors at earlier time points of
the stress period cannot be ignored; this study
suggests that a down-regulation of NCAM-140
might be implicated in the structural
alterations consistently shown to be induced in
the hippocampus by chronic stress exposure. As
NCAM-140 is involved in cell-cell adhesion and
neurite outgrowth, these findings suggest that
this molecule might be one of the molecular
mechanisms involved in the complex interactions
among neurodegeneration-related events
Vitamin A deficiency impairs contextual fear memory in rats: abnormalities in glucocorticoid pathway
Retinoic Acid Restores Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis and Reverses Spatial Memory Deficit in Vitamin A Deprived Rats
A dysfunction of retinoid hippocampal signaling pathway has been involved in the appearance of affective and cognitive disorders. However, the underlying neurobiological mechanisms remain unknown. Hippocampal granule neurons are generated throughout life and are involved in emotion and memory. Here, we investigated the effects of vitamin A deficiency (VAD) on neurogenesis and memory and the ability of retinoic acid (RA) treatment to prevent VAD-induced impairments. Adult retinoid-deficient rats were generated by a vitamin A-free diet from weaning in order to allow a normal development. The effects of VAD and/or RA administration were examined on hippocampal neurogenesis, retinoid target genes such as neurotrophin receptors and spatial reference memory measured in the water maze. Long-term VAD decreased neurogenesis and led to memory deficits. More importantly, these effects were reversed by 4 weeks of RA treatment. These beneficial effects may be in part related to an up-regulation of retinoid-mediated molecular events, such as the expression of the neurotrophin receptor TrkA. We have demonstrated for the first time that the effect of vitamin A deficient diet on the level of hippoccampal neurogenesis is reversible and that RA treatment is important for the maintenance of the hippocampal plasticity and function
Impact of chronic stress protocols in learning and memory in rodents: systematic review and meta-analysis
The idea that maladaptive stress impairs cognitive function has been a cornerstone of decades in basic and clinical research. However, disparate findings have reinforced the need to aggregate results from multiple sources in order to confirm the validity of such statement. In this work, a systematic review and meta-analyses were performed to aggregate results from rodent studies investigating the impact of chronic stress on learning and memory. Results obtained from the included studies revealed a significant effect of stress on global cognitive performance. In addition, stressed rodents presented worse consolidation of learned memories, although no significantly differences between groups at the acquisition phase were found. Despite the methodological heterogeneity across studies, these effects were independent of the type of stress, animals' strains or age. However, our findings suggest that stress yields a more detrimental effect on spatial navigation tests' performance. Surprisingly, the vast majority of the selected studies in this field did not report appropriate statistics and were excluded from the quantitative analysis. We have therefore purposed a set of guidelines termed PROBE (Preferred Reporting Orientations for Behavioral Experiments) to promote an adequate reporting of behavioral experiments.This work was funded by the European Commission (FP7) "SwitchBox" (Contract HEALTH-F2-2010-259772) project and co-financed by the Portuguese North Regional Operational Program (ON.2 - O Novo Norte) under the National Strategic Reference Framework (QREN), through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER), and by Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian (Portugal) (Contract grant number: P-139977; project "Better mental health during ageing based on temporal prediction of individual brain ageing trajectories (TEMPO)"). PSM is supported by an FCT fellowship grant, from the PhD-iHES program, with the reference PDE/BDE/113601/2015.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Dietary polyphenol supplementation prevents alterations of spatial navigation in middle-aged mice
Spatial learning and memory deficits associated with hippocampal synaptic plasticity impairments are commonly observed during aging. Besides, the beneficial role of dietary polyphenols has been suggested as potential functional food candidates to prevent this memory decline. Indeed, polyphenols could potentiate the signaling pathways of synaptic plasticity underlying learning and memory. In this study, spatial learning deficits of middle-aged mice were first highlighted and characterized according to their navigation patterns in the Morris water maze task. An eight-week polyphenol-enriched diet, containing a polyphenol-rich extract from grape and blueberry (PEGB; from the Neurophenols Consortium) with high contents of flavonoids, stilbenes and phenolic acids, was then successful in reversing these age-induced effects. The use of spatial strategies was indeed delayed with aging whereas a polyphenol supplementation could promote the occurrence of spatial strategies. These behavioral results were associated with neurobiological changes: while the expression of hippocampal calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII) mRNA levels was reduced in middle-aged animals, the polyphenol-enriched diet could rescue them. Besides, an increased expression of nerve growth neurotrophic factor (NGF) mRNA levels was also observed in supplemented adult and middle-aged mice. Thus these data suggest that supplementation with polyphenols could be an efficient nutritional way to prevent age-induced cognitive decline
I - Les fondements théoriques de l'enseignement du vocabulaire
Touyarot C. I - Les fondements théoriques de l'enseignement du vocabulaire. In: Repères pour la rénovation de l'enseignement du français à l'école élémentaire, n°7, 1971. Stage sur l'enseignement du vocabulaire (I.P.N. 25-28 février 1970) sous la direction de H. Romian et J. Dornel. pp. 59-61
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