Effects of daily environmental enrichment on behavior and dendritic spine density in hippocampus following neonatal hypoxia–ischemia in the rat

Hypoxia–ischemia (HI) is the main cause of mortality in the perinatal period and morbidity, in survivors, which is characterized by neurological disabilities. The immature brain is highly susceptible to hypoxic–ischemic insult and is responsive to environmental stimuli, such as environmental enrichm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental neurology 2013-03, Vol.241, p.25-33
Hauptverfasser: Rojas, Joseane Jiménez, Deniz, Bruna Ferrary, Miguel, Patrícia Maidana, Diaz, Ramiro, Hermel, Érica do Espírito-Santo, Achaval, Matilde, Netto, Carlos Alexandre, Pereira, Lenir Orlandi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hypoxia–ischemia (HI) is the main cause of mortality in the perinatal period and morbidity, in survivors, which is characterized by neurological disabilities. The immature brain is highly susceptible to hypoxic–ischemic insult and is responsive to environmental stimuli, such as environmental enrichment (EE). Previous results indicate that EE recovered memory deficits in adult rats without reversing hippocampal atrophy related to HI. The aim of this study was to investigate behavioral performance in the open field and rota-rod apparatuses, in object recognition and inhibitory avoidance tasks, as well as dendritic spine density in the hippocampus, in rats undergoing HI and exposed to EE. Seven-day old male rats were submitted to the HI procedure and divided into 4 groups: control maintained in standard environment (CTSE), controls submitted to EE (CTEE), HI in standard environment (HISE) and HI in EE (HIEE). Behavioral and morphological parameters were evaluated 9weeks after the environmental stimulation. Results indicate impairment in the object recognition task after HI that was recovered by enrichment; however the aversive memory impairment in the inhibitory avoidance task shown by hypoxic–ischemic rats was independent of the environment condition. Hypoxic–ischemic groups showed more crossing responses during the first minute in the open field, when compared to controls, but no differences were found between experimental groups in the rota-rod test. Dendritic spine density in the CA1 subfield of the right hippocampus (ipsilateral to the artery occlusion) was decreased after the HI insult, and increased in enriched controls; interestingly enriched HI rats did not differ from CTSE. In conclusion, EE was effective in recovering declarative memory impairment in object recognition and preserved hippocampal dendritic spine density loss after neonatal HI injury. ► Decreased spine density was identified in hippocampus of the hypoxic-ischemic rats. ► Environmental enrichment enhances dendritic spine density in hypoxic-ischemic animals. ► Enrichment did not recover aversive memory deficit after hypoxic-ischemic event. ► Object-recognition memory deficit was reversed by the enrichment. ► Control and hypoxic-ischemic groups showed no motor deficits in the rota-rod test.
ISSN:0014-4886
1090-2430
DOI:10.1016/j.expneurol.2012.11.026