| Rex CS, Lauterborn JC, Lin CY, Kramar
EA, Rogers GA, Gall CM, Lynch G. Department of Neurobiology
and Behavior, University of California at Irvine, 92697-4292,
USA.
Restoration of neuronal viability and synaptic plasticity through
increased trophic support is widely regarded as a potential therapy
for the cognitive declines that characterize aging. Previous studies
have shown that in the hippocampal CA1 basal dendritic field deficits
in the stabilization of long-term potentiation (LTP) are evident
by middle age. The present study tested whether increasing endogenous
brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) could reverse this age-related
change. We report here that in middle-aged (8- to 10-mo-old) rats,
in vivo treatments with a positive AMPA-type glutamate receptor
modulator both increase BDNF protein levels in the cortical telencephalon
and restore stabilization of basal dendritic LTP as assessed in
acute hippocampal slices 18 h after the last drug treatment. These
effects were not attributed to enhanced synaptic transmission
or to facilitation of burst responses used to induce LTP. Increasing
extracellular levels of BDNF by exogenous application to slices
of middle-aged rats was also sufficient to rescue the stabilization
of basal dendritic LTP.
Finally, otherwise stable LTP in ampakine-treated middle-aged
rats can be eliminated by infusion of the extracellular BDNF scavenger
TrkB-Fc. Together these results indicate that increases in endogenous
BDNF signaling can offset deficits in the postinduction processes
that stabilize LTP.
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