Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5631451 NeuroImage 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Effects of ghrelin on memory for food-related words-location associations were tested.•Functional connectivity during post-encoding rest was altered after ghrelin injection.•Acute ghrelin administration had no behavioral effects on long-term memory retention.•Acute ghrelin administration had no behavioral effects on several other cognitive tasks.•Ghrelin's effects on memory markedly differ between animal models and human subjects.

Ghrelin regulates energy homeostasis in various species and enhances memory in rodent models. In humans, the role of ghrelin in cognitive processes has yet to be characterized. Here we show in a double-blind randomized crossover design that acute administration of ghrelin alters encoding-related brain activity, however does not enhance memory formation in humans. Twenty-one healthy young male participants had to memorize food- and non-food-related words presented on a background of a virtual navigational route while undergoing fMRI recordings. After acute ghrelin administration, we observed decreased post-encoding resting state fMRI connectivity between the caudate nucleus and the insula, amygdala, and orbitofrontal cortex. In addition, brain activity related to subsequent memory performance was modulated by ghrelin. On the next day, however, no differences were found in free word recall or cued location-word association recall between conditions; and ghrelin's effects on brain activity or functional connectivity were unrelated to memory performance. Further, ghrelin had no effect on a cognitive test battery comprising tests for working memory, fluid reasoning, creativity, mental speed, and attention. In conclusion, in contrast to studies with animal models, we did not find any evidence for the potential of ghrelin acting as a short-term cognitive enhancer in humans.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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