Catecholaminergic Stimulation Restores High-sucrose Diet-induced Hippocampal Dysfunction
Overview
Neurology
Psychiatry
Authors
Affiliations
Increasing evidence suggests that long-term consumption of high-caloric diets increases the risk of developing cognitive dysfunctions. In the present study, we assessed the catecholaminergic activity in the hippocampus as a modulatory mechanism that is altered in rats exposed to six months of a high-sucrose diet (HSD). Male Wistar rats fed with this diet developed a metabolic disorder and showed impaired spatial memory in both water maze and object location memory (OLM) tasks. Intrahippocampal free-movement microdialysis showed a diminished dopaminergic and noradrenergic response to object exploration during OLM acquisition compared to rats fed with normal diet. In addition, electrophysiological results revealed an impaired long-term potentiation (LTP) of the perforant to dentate gyrus pathway in rats exposed to a HSD. Local administration of nomifensine, a catecholaminergic reuptake inhibitor, prior to OLM acquisition or LTP induction, improved long-term memory and electrophysiological responses, respectively. These results suggest that chronic exposure to HSD induces a hippocampal deterioration which impacts on cognitive and neural plasticity events negatively; these impairments can be ameliorated by increasing or restituting the affected catecholaminergic activity.
Soda T, Pasqua T, De Sarro G, Moccia F Biomedicines. 2024; 12(10).
PMID: 39457698 PMC: 11504205. DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines12102387.
Yalcin A, Saygin M, Ozmen O, Kavrik O, Orhan H Iran J Basic Med Sci. 2023; 26(1):69-75.
PMID: 36594054 PMC: 9790051. DOI: 10.22038/IJBMS.2022.65701.14453.
Dopamine activity on the perceptual salience for recognition memory.
Osorio-Gomez D, Guzman-Ramos K, Bermudez-Rattoni F Front Behav Neurosci. 2022; 16:963739.
PMID: 36275849 PMC: 9583835. DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.963739.
Memory and eating: A bidirectional relationship implicated in obesity.
Parent M, Higgs S, Cheke L, Kanoski S Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2021; 132:110-129.
PMID: 34813827 PMC: 8816841. DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2021.10.051.