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Journal ArticleDOI

Amelioration of cholinergic neuron atrophy and spatial memory impairment in aged rats by nerve growth factor.

TLDR
Continuous intracerebral infusion of NGF over a period of four weeks can partly reverse the cholinergic cell body atrophy and improve retention of a spatial memory task in behaviourally impaired aged rats.
Abstract
In aged rodents, impairments in learning and memory have been associated with an age-dependent decline in forebrain of cholinergic function, and recent evidence indicates that the cholinergic neurons in the nucleus basalis magnocellularis, the septal-diagonal band area and the striatum undergo age-dependent atrophy. Thus, as in Alzheimer-type dementia in man, degenerative changes in the forebrain cholinergic system may contribute to age-related cognitive impairments in rodents. The cause of these degenerative changes is not known. Recent studies have shown that the central cholinergic neurons in the septal-diagonal band area, nucleus basalis and striatum are sensitive to the neurotrophic protein nerve growth factor (NGF). In particular, intraventricular injections or infusions of NGF in young adult rats have been shown to prevent retrograde neuronal cell death and promote behavioural recovery after damage to the septo-hippocampal connections. It is so far not known, however, whether the atrophic cholinergic neurons in aged animals are responsive to NGF treatment. We report here that continuous intracerebral infusion of NGF over a period of four weeks can partly reverse the cholinergic cell body atrophy and improve retention of a spatial memory task in behaviourally impaired aged rats.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mutual Induction of TGFβ1 and NGF after Treatment with NGF or TGFβ1 in Grafted Chromaffin Cells of the Adrenal Medulla

TL;DR: It was found that NGF and TGFβ1 may regulate the expression of each other's protein in adult chromaffin grafts and TβRII mRNA was present in the adult rat Chromaffin cells and became downregulated as a result of NGF stimulation.
Book ChapterDOI

Differential Effect of Aging on Hippocampal Pyramidal Cell Responses to Muscarine and Nicotine

TL;DR: Although many different physiological and biochemical mechanisms in the hippocampus have been studied with respect to their possible role in learning and memory, of particular interest is the function of cholinergic afferents to this structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise-sustained patterns in a model of volume-coupled neural tissue.

TL;DR: A simple model is proposed that allows one to study the features of volume transmission coupling at various spatial scales and taking into account various inhomogeneities, obtained by the extension of the well-known FitzHugh-Nagumo system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhanced visuospatial memory following intracerebroventricular administration of nerve growth factor.

TL;DR: These experiments demonstrate that an acute pharmacological treatment that leads to a transient modification in the choline acetyltransferase activity can induce a behavioral change long after the treatment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Developments of a water-maze procedure for studying spatial learning in the rat

TL;DR: Developments of an open-field water-maze procedure in which rats learn to escape from opaque water onto a hidden platform are described, suggesting that they may lend themselves to a variety of behavioural investigations, including pharmacological work and studies of cerebral function.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cholinergic Hypothesis of Geriatric Memory Dysfunction

TL;DR: Biochemical, electrophysiological, and pharmacological evidence supporting a role for cholinergic dysfunction in age-related memory disturbances is critically reviewed and an attempt has been made to identify pseudoissues, resolve certain controversies, and clarify misconceptions that have occurred in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nerve growth factor promotes survival of septal cholinergic neurons after fimbrial transections

TL;DR: It is suggested that fimbrial transections resulted in retrograde degeneration of cholinergic septo-hippocampal neurons and that NGF treatment strongly attenuated this lesion-induced degeneration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nerve growth factor treatment after brain injury prevents neuronal death

TL;DR: Cholinergic neuronal degeneration after axotomy has been proposed to be due to the loss of a retrogradely transported neurotrophic factor, possibly nerve growth factor (NGF), and NGF was continuously infused into the lateral ventricles of adult rats that had received bilateral lesions of all cholinergic axons projecting from the medial septum to the dorsal hippocampus.
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