Accelerated cognitive aging in diabetic rats is prevented by lowering corticosterone levels

Diabetes and normal aging are both characterized by increases in levels of glucocorticoids. Because long-term exposure to elevated glucocorticoids can be detrimental to hippocampal function, we evaluated the performance of young diabetic rats in the 14-unit T-maze, a task that is sensitive to hippoc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurobiology of learning and memory 2008-09, Vol.90 (2), p.479-483
Hauptverfasser: Stranahan, Alexis M., Lee, Kim, Pistell, Paul J., Nelson, Christopher M., Readal, Nathaniel, Miller, Marshall G., Spangler, Edward L., Ingram, Donald K., Mattson, Mark P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Diabetes and normal aging are both characterized by increases in levels of glucocorticoids. Because long-term exposure to elevated glucocorticoids can be detrimental to hippocampal function, we evaluated the performance of young diabetic rats in the 14-unit T-maze, a task that is sensitive to hippocampal deficits. To assess the contribution of diabetes-induced elevations in corticosterone levels, we examined maze learning in diabetic rats that had levels of corticosterone ‘clamped’ through adrenalectomy and low-dose corticosterone replacement. For comparison, we also tested a separate group of young and aged rats in the maze. Adrenally intact diabetic rats learned poorly in the 14-unit T-maze. Preventing the increases in corticosterone levels that accompanies the onset of experimental diabetes also prevented deficits in complex maze learning. The pattern of errors made by adrenally intact diabetic rats was similar to the pattern of errors made by aged rats, suggesting that the cognitive profiles of diabetic and aged rats share common features.
ISSN:1074-7427
1095-9564
DOI:10.1016/j.nlm.2008.05.005