Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5735448 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2017 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
Chemotherapy induced cognitive impairment (i.e. chemobrain) involves acute and long-term deficits in memory, executive function, and processing speed. Animal studies investigating these cognitive deficits have had mixed results, potentially due to variability in the complexity of behavioral tasks across experiments. Further, common chemotherapy treatments such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) break down myelin integrity corresponding to hippocampal neurodegenerative deficits and mitochondrial dysfunction. There is little evidence, however, of pharmacological treatments that may target mitochondrial dysfunction. Using a differential reinforcement of low rates (DRL) task combining spatial and temporal components, the current study evaluated the preventative effects of the pharmacological agent KU32 on the behavior of rats treated with 5-FU (5-FUÂ +Â Saline vs. 5FUÂ +Â KU32). DRL performance was analyzed the day after the first set of injections (D1), the day after the second set of injections (D7) and the last day of the experiment (D14). The 5FUÂ +Â KU32 group earned significantly more reinforcers on the DRL task at D7 and D14 than the 5FUÂ +Â Saline group. Further, the 5FUÂ +Â KU32 group showed significantly better temporal discrimination. The 5FUÂ +Â KU32 showed within-group improvement in temporal discrimination from D7 to D14. No significant differences were observed in spatial discrimination, however, those in the 5FUÂ +Â Saline group responded more frequently on T3 compared to the 5FUÂ +Â KU32 group, highlighting temporal discrimination differences between groups. The current data suggest that KU32 shows promise in the prevention of chemotherapy induced impairments in temporal discrimination.
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Authors
Michael J. Sofis, David P. Jarmolowicz, Sam V. Kaplan, Rachel C. Gehringer, Shea M. Lemley, Gaurav Garg, Brian S. Blagg, Michael A. Johnson,