1. Lifelong environmental enrichment in rats: impact on emotional behavior, spatial memory vividness, and cholinergic neurons over the lifespan.
- Author
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Harati H, Barbelivien A, Herbeaux K, Muller MA, Engeln M, Kelche C, Cassel JC, and Majchrzak M
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Maze Learning physiology, Rats, Rats, Long-Evans, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Aging physiology, Behavior, Animal, Cholinergic Neurons physiology, Emotions physiology, Memory physiology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Social Environment
- Abstract
We assessed lifelong environmental enrichment effects on possible age-related modifications in emotional behaviors, spatial memory acquisition, retrieval of recent and remote spatial memory, and cholinergic forebrain systems. At the age of 1 month, Long-Evans female rats were placed in standard or enriched rearing conditions and tested after 3 (young), 12 (middle-aged), or 24 (aged) months. Environmental enrichment decreased the reactivity to stressful situations regardless of age. In the water maze test, it delayed the onset of learning deficits and prevented age-dependent spatial learning and recent memory retrieval alterations. Remote memory retrieval, which was altered independently of age under standard rearing conditions, was rescued by enrichment in young and middle-aged, but unfortunately not aged rats. A protected basal forebrain cholinergic system, which could well be one out of several neuronal manifestations of lifelong environmental enrichment, might have contributed to the behavioral benefits of this enrichment.
- Published
- 2013
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