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The Effect of Intrahippocampal Insulin Injection on Scopolamine-induced Spatial Memory Impairment and Extracellular Signal-regulated Kinases Alteration

Authors :
Ahmad Jahanmahin
Zahra Abbasnejad
Abbas Haghparast
Abolhassan Ahmadiani
Rasoul Ghasemi
Source :
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 23-36 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Iran University of Medical Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

Introduction: It is well documented that insulin has neuroprotective and neuromodulator effects and can protect against different models of memory loss. Furthermore, cholinergic activity plays a significant role in memory, and scopolamine-induced memory loss is widely used as an experimental model of dementia. The current study aimed at investigating the possible effects of insulin against scopolamine-induced memory impairment in Wistar rat and its underlying molecular mechanisms. Methods: Accordingly, animals were bilaterally cannulated in CA1, hippocampus. Intrahippocampal administration of insulin 6 MU and 12 MU in CA1 per day was performed during first 6 days after surgery. During next four days, the animal’s spatial learning and memory were assessed in Morris water maze test (three days of learning and one day of retention test). The animals received scopolamine (1 mg/kg) Intraperitoneally (IP) 30 minutes before the onset of behavioral tests in each day. In the last day, the hippocampi were dissected and the levels of MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinases) and caspase-3 activation were analyzed by Western blot technique. Results: The behavioral results showed that scopolamine impaired spatial learning and memory without activating casapase-3, P38, and JNK, but chronic pretreatment by both doses of insulin was unable to restore this spatial memory impairment. In addition, scopolamine significantly reduced Extracellular signal-Regulated Kinases (ERKs) activity and insulin was unable to restore this reduction. Results revealed that scopolamine-mediated memory loss was not associated with hippocampal damage. Conclusion: Insulin as a neuroprotective agent cannot restore memory when there is no hippocampal damage. In addition, the neuromodulator effect of insulin is not potent enough to overwhelm scopolamine-mediated disruptions of synaptic neurotransmission.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2008126X and 22287442
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3a8c8f8c35241e992196ae697db2b64
Document Type :
article