Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
69
result(s) for
"Rapp, Peter R."
Sort by:
Bidirectional changes to hippocampal theta-gamma comodulation predict memory for recent spatial episodes
by
Rapp, Peter R
,
Shirvalkar, Prasad R
,
Shapiro, Matthew L
in
Animal cognition
,
Animal memory
,
Animals
2010
Episodic memory requires the hippocampus, which is thought to bind cortical inputs into conjunctive codes. Local field potentials (LFPs) reflect dendritic and synaptic oscillations whose temporal structure may coordinate cellular mechanisms of plasticity and memory. We now report that single-trial spatial memory performance in rats was predicted by the power comodulation of theta (4-10 Hz) and low gamma (30-50 Hz) rhythms in the hippocampus. Theta-gamma comodulation (TGC) was prominent during successful memory retrieval but was weak when memory failed or was unavailable during spatial exploration in sample trials. Muscimol infusion into medial septum reduced the probability of TGC and successful memory retrieval. In contrast, patterned electrical stimulation of the fimbria-fornix increased TGC in amnestic animals and partially rescued memory performance in the water maze. The results suggest that TGC accompanies memory retrieval in the hippocampus and that patterned brain stimulation may inform therapeutic strategies for cognitive disorders.
Journal Article
Cognitive Reserve in Model Systems for Mechanistic Discovery: The Importance of Longitudinal Studies
2021
The goal of this review article is to provide a resource for longitudinal studies, using animal models, directed at understanding and modifying the relationship between cognition and brain structure and function throughout life. We propose that forthcoming longitudinal studies will build upon a wealth of knowledge gleaned from prior cross-sectional designs to identify early predictors of variability in cognitive function during aging, and characterize fundamental neurobiological mechanisms that underlie the vulnerability to, and the trajectory of, cognitive decline. Finally, we present examples of biological measures that may differentiate mechanisms of the cognitive reserve at the molecular, cellular, and network level.
Journal Article
Associations of baseline and longitudinal change in cerebellum volume with age-related changes in verbal learning and memory
2023
•Cross-sectional and longitudinal cerebellar volume and verbal memory were examined.•Identified age-dependent cross-sectional associations with baseline volumes.•Baseline cerebellum volumes were not associated with longitudinal verbal memory.•Vermis lobule VI-VII and cerebellum WM change was associated with change in memory.•Association between cerebellar WM volume and memory remained after HC adjustment.
The cerebellum is involved in higher-order cognitive functions, e.g., learning and memory, and is susceptible to age-related atrophy. Yet, the cerebellum's role in age-related cognitive decline remains largely unknown. We investigated cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between cerebellar volume and verbal learning and memory. Linear mixed effects models and partial correlations were used to examine the relationship between changes in cerebellum volumes (total cerebellum, cerebellum white matter [WM], cerebellum hemisphere gray matter [GM], and cerebellum vermis subregions) and changes in verbal learning and memory performance among 549 Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging participants (2,292 visits). All models were adjusted by baseline demographic characteristics (age, sex, race, education), and APOE e4 carrier status. In examining associations between change with change, we tested an additional model that included either hippocampal (HC), cuneus, or postcentral gyrus (PoCG) volumes to assess whether cerebellar volumes were uniquely associated with verbal learning and memory. Cross-sectionally, the association of baseline cerebellum GM and WM with baseline verbal learning and memory was age-dependent, with the oldest individuals showing the strongest association between volume and performance. Baseline volume was not significantly associated with change in learning and memory. However, analysis of associations between change in volumes and changes in verbal learning and memory showed that greater declines in verbal memory were associated with greater volume loss in cerebellum white matter, and preserved GM volume in cerebellum vermis lobules VI-VII. The association between decline in verbal memory and decline in cerebellar WM volume remained after adjustment for HC, cuneus, and PoCG volume. Our findings highlight that associations between cerebellum volume and verbal learning and memory are age-dependent and regionally specific.
Journal Article
Proteomic analysis of APOEε4 carriers implicates lipid metabolism, complement and lymphocyte signaling in cognitive resilience
by
Shadyab, Aladdin H.
,
Tian, Qu
,
Kapogiannis, Dimitrios
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Alzheimer Disease - blood
2024
Background
Apolipoprotein E (
APOE
) ε4 allele is the strongest genetic risk factor for late onset Alzheimer’s disease (AD). This case-cohort study used targeted plasma biomarkers and large-scale proteomics to examine the biological mechanisms that allow some
APOE
ε4 carriers to maintain normal cognitive functioning in older adulthood.
Methods
APOE
ε4 carriers and
APOE
ε3 homozygotes enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS) from 1996 to 1999 were classified as
resilient
if they remained cognitively unimpaired beyond age 80, and as
non-resilient
if they developed cognitive impairment before or at age 80. AD pathology (Aß
42/40
) and neurodegeneration (NfL, tau) biomarkers, as well as 1007 proteins (Olink) were quantified in blood collected at study enrollment (on average 14 years prior) when participants were cognitively normal. We identified plasma proteins that distinguished between resilient and non-resilient
APOE
ε4 carriers, examined whether these associations generalized to
APOE
ε3 homozygotes, and replicated these findings in the UK Biobank.
Results
A total of 1610 participants were included (baseline age: 71.3 [3.8 SD] years; all White; 42%
APOEε
4 carriers). Compared to resilient
APOE
ε4 carriers, non-resilient
APOE
ε4 carriers had lower Aß
42/40
/tau ratio and greater NfL at baseline. Proteomic analyses identified four proteins differentially expressed between resilient and non-resilient
APOEε
4 carriers at an FDR-corrected
P
< 0.05. While one of the candidate proteins, a marker of neuronal injury (NfL), also distinguished resilient from non-resilient
APOE
ε3 homozygotes, the other three proteins, known to be involved in lipid metabolism (ANGPTL4) and immune signaling (PTX3, NCR1), only predicted resilient vs. non-resilient status among
APOE
ε4 carriers (protein*genotype interaction-
P
< 0.05). Three of these four proteins also predicted 14-year dementia risk among
APOE
ε4 carriers in the UK Biobank validation sample (
N
= 9420). While the candidate proteins showed little to no association with targeted biomarkers of AD pathology, protein network and enrichment analyses suggested that natural killer (NK) cell and T lymphocyte signaling (via PKC-θ) distinguished resilient from non-resilient
APOE
ε4 carriers.
Conclusions
We identified and replicated a plasma proteomic signature associated with cognitive resilience among
APOEε
4 carriers. These proteins implicate specific immune processes in the preservation of cognitive status despite elevated genetic risk for AD. Future studies in diverse cohorts will be needed to assess the generalizability of these results.
Journal Article
Neuronal and morphological bases of cognitive decline in aged rhesus monkeys
by
Morrison, John H.
,
Hara, Yuko
,
Rapp, Peter R.
in
Acknowledgment
,
Age differences
,
Age effects
2012
Rhesus monkeys provide a valuable model for studying the basis of cognitive aging because they are vulnerable to age-related decline in executive function and memory in a manner similar to humans. Some of the behavioral tasks sensitive to the effects of aging are the delayed response working memory test, recognition memory tests including the delayed nonmatching-to-sample and the delayed recognition span task, and tests of executive function including reversal learning and conceptual set-shifting task. Much effort has been directed toward discovering the neurobiological parameters that are coupled to individual differences in age-related cognitive decline. Area 46 of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) has been extensively studied for its critical role in executive function while the hippocampus and related cortical regions have been a major target of research for memory function. Some of the key age-related changes in area 46 include decreases in volume, microcolumn strength, synapse density, and α1- and α2-adrenergic receptor binding densities. All of these measures significantly correlate with cognitive scores. Interestingly, the critical synaptic subtypes associated with cognitive function appear to be different between the dlPFC and the hippocampus. For example, the dendritic spine subtype most critical to task acquisition and vulnerable to aging in area 46 is the thin spine, whereas in the dentate gyrus, the density of large mushroom spines with perforated synapses correlates with memory performance. This review summarizes age-related changes in anatomical, neuronal, and synaptic parameters within brain areas implicated in cognition and whether these changes are associated with cognitive decline.
Journal Article
Age-Related Memory Impairment Is Associated with Disrupted Multivariate Epigenetic Coordination in the Hippocampus
2012
Mounting evidence linking epigenetic regulation to memory-related synaptic plasticity raises the possibility that altered chromatin modification dynamics might contribute to age-dependent cognitive decline. Here we show that the coordinated orchestration of both baseline and experience-dependent epigenetic regulation seen in the young adult hippocampus is lost in association with cognitive aging. Using a well-characterized rat model that reliably distinguishes aged individuals with significant memory impairment from others with normal memory, no single epigenetic mark or experience-dependent modification in the hippocampus uniquely predicted differences in the cognitive outcome of aging. The results instead point to a multivariate pattern in which modification-specific, bidirectional chromatin regulation is dependent on recent behavioral experience, chronological age, cognitive status, and hippocampal region. Whereas many epigenetic signatures were coupled with memory capacity among young adults and aged rats with preserved cognitive function, such associations were absent among aged rats with deficits in hippocampal memory. By comparison with the emphasis in current preclinical translational research on promoting chromatin modifications permissive for gene expression, our findings suggest that optimally successful hippocampal aging may hinge instead on enabling coordinated control across the epigenetic landscape.
Journal Article
Transcriptional changes in the rat brain induced by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
by
Becker, Kevin G.
,
Shroff, Kavisha
,
Wood, William H.
in
aging
,
Alzheimer's disease
,
Animal models
2023
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has emerged as a promising tool to treat neuropsychiatric conditions, but the molecular changes it causes in brain are largely unknown. In this study, using three experimental models in rats, we report that the effects of rTMS are more complex and dynamic than previously known. Specifically, alterations in gene expression are dependent on brain region, stimulation protocol, age, and interval after treatment. Among the clinically relevant rTMS-induced alterations found here, we highlight expression changes in genes involved in glutamatergic, GABAergic, and inflammatory pathways. Importantly, rTMS affected the expression of genes involved in disorders for which it is being tested clinically, including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. Our findings provide a foundation for future research that aims to tailor rTMS for the treatment of neuropsychiatric conditions.
Journal Article
Interactive effects of age and estrogen on cognition and pyramidal neurons in monkey prefrontal cortex
2007
We previously reported that long-term cyclic estrogen (E) treatment reverses age-related impairment of cognitive function mediated by the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in ovariectomized (OVX) female rhesus monkeys, and that E induces a corresponding increase in spine density in layer III dlPFC pyramidal neurons. We have now investigated the effects of the same E treatment in young adult females. In contrast to the results for aged monkeys, E treatment failed to enhance dlPFC-dependent task performance relative to vehicle control values (group young OVX+Veh) but nonetheless led to a robust increase in spine density. This response was accompanied by a decline in dendritic length, however, such that the total number of spines per neuron was equivalent in young OVX+Veh and OVX+E groups. Robust effects of chronological age, independent of ovarian hormone status, were also observed, comprising significant age-related declines in dendritic length and spine density, with a preferential decrease in small spines in the aged groups. Notably, the spine effects were partially reversed by cyclic E administration, although young OVX+Veh monkeys still had a higher complement of small spines than did aged E treated monkeys. In summary, layer III pyramidal neurons in the dlPFC are sensitive to ovarian hormone status in both young and aged monkeys, but these effects are not entirely equivalent across age groups. The results also suggest that the cognitive benefit of E treatment in aged monkeys is mediated by enabling synaptic plasticity through a cyclical increase in small, highly plastic dendritic spines in the primate dlPFC.
Journal Article
Imaging Correlates of Brain Function in Monkeys and Rats Isolates a Hippocampal Subregion Differentially Vulnerable to Aging
by
Barnes, Carol A.
,
Buonocore, Michael
,
Chawla, Monica K.
in
Age groups
,
Aging
,
Aging - metabolism
2004
The hippocampal formation contains a distinct population of neurons organized into separate anatomical subregions. Each hippocampal subregion expresses a unique molecular profile accounting for their differential vulnerability to mechanisms of memory dysfunction. Nevertheless, it remains unclear which hippocampal subregion is most sensitive to the effects of advancing age. Here we investigate this question by using separate imaging techniques, each assessing different correlates of neuronal function. First, we used MRI to map cerebral blood volume, an established correlate of basal metabolism, in the hippocampal subregions of young and old rhesus monkeys. Second, we used in situ hybridization to map Arc expression in the hippocampal subregions of young and old rats. Arc is an immediate early gene that is activated in a behavior-dependent manner and is correlated with spike activity. Results show that the dentate gyrus is the hippocampal subregion most sensitive to the effects of advancing age, which together with prior studies establishes a cross-species consensus. This pattern isolates the locus of age-related hippocampal dysfunction and differentiates normal aging from Alzheimer's disease.
Journal Article
Loss of Sensitivity to Rewards by Dopamine Neurons May Underlie Age-Related Increased Probability Discounting
2020
Normative aging is known to affect how decisions are made in risky situations. Although important individual variability exists, on average, aging is accompanied by greater risk aversion. Here the behavioral and neural mechanisms of greater risk aversion were examined in young and old rats trained on an instrumental probability discounting task. Consistent with the literature, old rats showed greater discounting of reward value when the probability of obtaining rewards dropped below 100%. Behaviorally, reward magnitude discrimination was the same between young and old rats, and yet these same rats exhibited reduced sensitivity to positive, but not negative, choice outcomes. The latter behavioral result was congruent with additional findings that the aged ventral tegmental neurons (including dopamine cells) were less responsive to rewards when compared to the same cell types recorded from young animals. In sum, it appears that reduced responses of dopamine neurons to rewards contribute to aging-related changes in risky decisions.
Journal Article