TY - JOUR
T1 - Higher levels of estradiol replacement correlate with better spatial memory in surgically menopausal young and middle-aged rats
AU - Talboom, Joshua S.
AU - Williams, Brice J.
AU - Baxley, Edmond R.
AU - West, Stephen
AU - Bimonte-Nelson, Heather
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by grants awarded to HAB-N [National Institute on Aging (AG023925-01), Institute for Mental Health Research, Alzheimer’s Disease Core Center Pilot Program, the state of Arizona and a Specialized Center of Research Pilot Research Grant co-funded by the Office of Research on Women’s Health and NIDA (P50 DA16511)].
PY - 2008/7
Y1 - 2008/7
N2 - The current study investigated whether, for spatial reference memory, age impacts (1) sensitivity to surgical ovarian hormone loss (Ovx), (2) response to estradiol therapy (ET), and (3) the relation between circulating estradiol levels and memory scores in ovary-intact sham and Ovx plus ET rats. Young, middle-aged and aged Fischer-344 rats received sham, Ovx or Ovx plus ET treatments, and were then tested on the Morris maze. After the last test trial, a probe trial was given whereby the platform was removed. Circulating estradiol levels were then determined and correlated with performance. In Study 1, Ovx facilitated learning on day one, but impaired performance after day one, in young rats. Ovx did not influence performance in middle-aged rats. In young and middle-aged Ovx rats, ET enhanced performance with higher exogenous estradiol levels correlating with better performance during testing and the probe trial. There was no relationship between endogenous estradiol levels and performance in sham young or middle-aged rats. Study 2 showed that, like middle-aged rats, aged rats were not impacted by Ovx. Further, for aged Ovx rats, the ET regimen that was beneficial at earlier ages was no longer effective during test trials, and had only minor benefits for platform localization as assessed by the probe trial. Collectively, the findings suggest that the effects of Ovx as well as responsivity to the currently utilized ET regimen changes with age. Further, there appears to be a distinction between sensitivity to Ovx and responsiveness to ET after Ovx for spatial reference memory performance.
AB - The current study investigated whether, for spatial reference memory, age impacts (1) sensitivity to surgical ovarian hormone loss (Ovx), (2) response to estradiol therapy (ET), and (3) the relation between circulating estradiol levels and memory scores in ovary-intact sham and Ovx plus ET rats. Young, middle-aged and aged Fischer-344 rats received sham, Ovx or Ovx plus ET treatments, and were then tested on the Morris maze. After the last test trial, a probe trial was given whereby the platform was removed. Circulating estradiol levels were then determined and correlated with performance. In Study 1, Ovx facilitated learning on day one, but impaired performance after day one, in young rats. Ovx did not influence performance in middle-aged rats. In young and middle-aged Ovx rats, ET enhanced performance with higher exogenous estradiol levels correlating with better performance during testing and the probe trial. There was no relationship between endogenous estradiol levels and performance in sham young or middle-aged rats. Study 2 showed that, like middle-aged rats, aged rats were not impacted by Ovx. Further, for aged Ovx rats, the ET regimen that was beneficial at earlier ages was no longer effective during test trials, and had only minor benefits for platform localization as assessed by the probe trial. Collectively, the findings suggest that the effects of Ovx as well as responsivity to the currently utilized ET regimen changes with age. Further, there appears to be a distinction between sensitivity to Ovx and responsiveness to ET after Ovx for spatial reference memory performance.
KW - Aging
KW - Estrogen
KW - Ovariectomy
KW - Rat
KW - Reference memory
KW - Spatial memory
KW - Water maze
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=44649096897&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.nlm.2008.04.002
DO - 10.1016/j.nlm.2008.04.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 18485753
AN - SCOPUS:44649096897
SN - 1074-7427
VL - 90
SP - 155
EP - 163
JO - Communications in behavioral biology. Part A: [Original articles]
JF - Communications in behavioral biology. Part A: [Original articles]
IS - 1
ER -