| Literature DB >> 18709359 |
Olga A H Reneerkens1, Kris Rutten, Harry W M Steinbusch, Arjan Blokland, Jos Prickaerts.
Abstract
RATIONALE: One of the major complaints most people face during aging is an impairment in cognitive functioning. This has a negative impact on the quality of daily life and is even more prominent in patients suffering from neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders including Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, and depression. So far, the majority of cognition enhancers are generally targeting one particular neurotransmitter system. However, recently phosphodiesterases (PDEs) have gained increased attention as a potential new target for cognition enhancement. Inhibition of PDEs increases the intracellular availability of the second messengers cGMP and/or cAMP.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18709359 PMCID: PMC2704616 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-008-1273-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
Localization of the different PDE isoforms in the adult brain of rodents and humans
| Isoform | Localization in the brain | Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PDE1A | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum, thalamus, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Billingsley et al. ( |
| PDE1B | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum | Mouse, rat | Cho et al. ( |
| PDE1C | Hippocampus, cortex, amygdala, cerebellum | Mouse | Yan et al. ( |
| PDE2A | Hippocampus, cortex, striatum, amygdala, hypothalamus, midbrain | Human, rat, mouse | Bolger et al. ( |
| PDE3 | Throughout the brain | Rat | Bolger et al. ( |
| PDE4A | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum, thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala, midbrain, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Braun et al. ( |
| PDE4B | Hippocampus, cortex, striatum, hypothalamus, midbrain, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Braun et al. ( |
| PDE4D | Hippocampus, cortex, striatum, hypothalamus, midbrain, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Cherry and Davis ( |
| PDE5A | Hippocampus, cortex, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Reyes-Irisarri et al. ( |
| PDE7A | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum | Human, rat | Miro et al. ( |
| PDE7B | Hippocampus, cortex, striatum, midbrain | Human, rat | Perez-Torres et al. ( |
| PDE8B | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum, midbrain | Human, rat | Kobayashi et al. ( |
| PDE9A | Hippocampus, cortex, olfactory bulb, striatum, thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala, midbrain, cerebellum | Human, rat, mouse | Reyes-Irisarri et al. ( |
| PDE10 | Hippocampus, cortex, striatum, midbrain, cerebellum | Rat | Seeger et al. ( |
Note that this table does not provide information with respect to the level of expression of the different isoforms in the brain. In addition, expression can implicate mRNA levels or protein levels dependent on the study referred to
Overview of PDEs
| Type | Number of genes | Property | Substrate | Selective inhibitors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDE1 | 3 | Ca2+-CaM-stimulated | cAMP/cGMP | IBMX, calimidazolium, phenethiazines, vinpocetine, SCH51866 |
| PDE2 | 1 | cGMP-stimulated | cAMP/cGMP | EHNA, BAY 60-7550, aptosyn |
| PDE3 | 2 | cGMP-inhibited | cAMP | Cilostamide, milrinone, SK&F 95654 |
| PDE4 | 4 | cAMP-specific | cAMP | Rolipram, rofluminast, ariflo, HT0712, ibudilast, mesembrine |
| PDE5 | 1 | cGMP-specific | cGMP | Zaprinast, sildenafil, vardenafil, tadelafil, SK&F 96231, udenafil, avanafil, DA-8159 |
| PDE6 | 4 | Photoreceptor | cGMP | (Sildenafil) |
| PDE7 | 2 | cAMP high affinity | cAMP | BRL 50481 |
| PDE8 | 2 | cAMP high affinity | cAMP | ? |
| PDE9 | 1 | cGMP high affinity | cGMP | SCH 81566, BAY 73-6691 |
| PDE10 | 1 | cAMP-inhibited | cGMP | Papaverine, TP-10, PQ10 |
| PDE11 | 1 | Dual substrate | cAMP/cGMP | (Tadelafil) |
The properties and substrate specificity are depicted (Bender and Beavo 2006). In addition, commonly used selective PDE inhibitors are mentioned
PDE phosphodiesterase, cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate, cGMP cyclic guanosine monophosphate
Overview of effects of PDE2-Is on cognition
| Task (cognitive process, area involved) | Model (species) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Object recognition task (object memory, hippocampus and rhinal cortex) | Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 60-7550 (3 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after, 1 h, 3 h or 6 h after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 60-7550 (3 mg/kg, immediately after T1 or 3 h after T1) improved memory consolidation | Rutten et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3, 1 or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 60-7550 (1 or 3 mg/kg, immediately after T1) improved memory consolidation | Boess et al. ( | |
| Impaired by age, 3, 12 and 24 months old (rat) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3 mg/kg, s.c.) 1 h before first trial or immediately after first trial (2 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 60-7550 1 h before T1 improved acquisition in all age groups. In addition, it improved consolidation in animals of 3 and 12 months when given immediately after T1 | Domek-Lopacinska and Strosznajder ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3, 1 or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3 or 1 mg/kg, immediately after T1) improved memory consolidation | Boess et al. ( | |
| Social recognition (social memory, hippocampus and amygdala) | Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3, 0.6, 1, 2, 3 or 6 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 60-7550 (1, 2, 3, or 6 mg/kg, immediately after T1) improved memory consolidation | Boess et al. ( |
| T-maze (working memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by MK-801, 0.125 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before test session (mouse) | BAY 60-7550 (0.3, 1, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before test session | BAY 60-7550 (3 mg/kg) reversed MK-801 induced deficit | Boess et al. ( |
T1 trial 1, T2 trial 2, p.o. per os, i.p. intraperitoneal
Overview of effects of PDE4-Is on cognition
| Task (cognitive process, area involved) | Model (species) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water escape task (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by microsphere embolism-induced cerebral ischemia (rat) | Rolipram (3 mg/kg, i.p.) 10 days, after embolism | Rolipram attenuates acquisition deficit measured at days 7–9 | Nagakura et al. ( |
| Impaired by PDE4B KO (mouse) | – | No effect | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Delayed matching to position water maze (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Unimpaired (rat) | L-454,560 (0, 0.1, 0.3, or 1 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before testing | L-454,560 (0.3 and 1 mg/kg) improved performance | Huang et al. ( |
| Radial arm water maze (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by APP-PS1 Alzheimer KO (mouse) | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg, s.c.) for 3 weeks | Improvement when tested at 2 months after 3-week treatment | Gong et al. ( |
| Impaired by PS1/PDAPP KO (mouse) | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg, s.c.) once a day for 2 weeks before testing | Rolipram improved working memory | Costa et al. ( | |
| Barnes circular maze (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by age, 18 months old (mouse) | Rolipram (0.016 mg/kg, i.p.) 40 min before training | More mice acquire the task and number of errors is reduced | Bach et al. ( |
| Radial arm maze (working and reference memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by scopolamine 0.5/1.0 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before test (rat) | Rolipram (0.01–1 mg/kg, i.p.) 45 min before test | MED: 0.1 (working memory) and >0.1 mg/kg (reference memory) | Zhang and O’Donnell ( |
| Impaired by scopolamine, 0.5 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before test (rat) | Given 30 min before test (±)-rolipram 0.01–1 mg/kg, p.o.; (−)-rolipram 0.005–1 mg/kg, p.o.; (+)-rolipram 0.1–50 mg/kg, p.o. | MED (working memory): (±)-rolipram 0.02–0.2 mg/kg, (–)-rolipram 0.01–0.02 and 0.2/0.5 mg/kg (bi phasic), (+)-rolipram 20/50 mg/kg | Egawa et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MK-801, 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., 60 min before test (rat) | Rolipram (0.01–0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before test | MED: 0.05 (working memory) and 0.1 mg/kg (reference memory) | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MK-801, 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., 60 min before testing (rat) | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.), MEM 1018 or MEM 1091 (0.1–2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) 45 min before test | MED: 0.1 mg/kg rolipram working memory, MED: 2.5 mg/kg MEM 1018 working and reference memory MED:2.5 mg/kg MEM 1091 on reference memory | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MEK inhibitor UO126, 8 μg/rat into hippocampus, given twice: 60 and 30 min before test (rat) | Rolipram (0.05, 0.1, mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before test | MED: 0.1 mg/kg (reference memory) | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Passive avoidance (inhibitory avoidance learning, hippocampus and amygdala) | Impaired by (1) protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin, 150 mg/kg, s.c., 30 min before training, (2) low baseline (mouse) | Rolipram (3 or 10 mg/kg, i.p., immediately | MED 10 mg/kg, given immediately after training (1+2) | Randt et al. ( |
| Impaired by scopolamine, 1 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before acquisition (mouse) | Rolipram (1–30 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before acquisition | MED: 10 mg/kg | Imanishi et al. ( | |
| Impaired by scopolamine, 1.5 mg/kg, i.p., immediately | Rolipram (10 or 30 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before training | MED: 30 mg/kg | Ghelardini et al. ( | |
| Impaired by scopolamine, 3 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before retention test (rat) | Given 60 min before retention test. (±)-rolipram 0.01–0.1 mg/kg, p.o.; (−)-rolipram 0.005–0.02 mg/kg, p.o.; (+)-rolipram 0.3–10 mg/kg, p.o. | MED: (±)-rolipram 0.02–0.1 mg/kg, (−)-rolipram 0.01–0.02 mg/kg, (+)-rolipram 2 mg/kg; no effect at 10 mg/kg | Egawa et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MK-801 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., 60 min before test (rat) | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before test | MED: ≤0.1 mg/kg | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MK-801, 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., 60 min before testing (rat) | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.), MEM 1018 or MEM 1091 (0.1–2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) 45 min before test | MED: rolipram 0.1 mg/kg, MEM1018 0.1–2.5 mg/kg, and MEM 1091 0.5–2.5 mg/kg on reversal latency | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Impaired by MEK inhibitor UO126, 8 μg/rat into hippocampus, given twice: 60 and 30 min before test (rat) | Rolipram (0.1, mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before test or 30 μg/rat into hippocampus, 20 min before test | Reversal retention deficit 48 h post training | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Impaired by PDE4B KO (mouse) | – | No effect | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Three-panel runway task (working memory, hippocampus and prefrontal cortex) | Impaired by scopolamine, 0.56 mg/kg, i.p., 15 min before first trial (rat) | Rolipram (0.032 or 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before first trial | MED: 0.1 mg/kg for decrease errors | Imanishi et al. ( |
| Impaired by cerebral ischemia by four-vessel occlusion (rat) | Rolipram (0.032 or 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before first trial (immediately after reperfusion) | MED: 0.1 mg/kg for decrease errors | Imanishi et al. ( | |
| Impaired by ECS immediately after training (rat) | Rolipram (0.1 or 0.32 mg/kg, i.p.) just before ECS | MED: 0.32 mg/kg for decrease errors | Imanishi et al. ( | |
| Inhibitory avoidance learning (hippocampus and amygdala) | Impaired by (1) protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin, 150 mg/kg, s.c., 30 min before training, (2) low baseline (mouse) | Rolipram (3 or 10 mg/kg, i.p., immediately | MED 10 mg/kg, given immediately after training (1+2) | Randt et al. ( |
| Contextual fear conditioning (learning, hippocampus and amygdala) | Unimpaired (mouse) | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg, s.c.) 30 min before training | Improved retention 24 h after training | Barad et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Rolipram 0.5 mg/kg/day for 7 days chronic delivery by osmotic minipumps | Improved memory consolidation and slower extinction of conditioned fear | Monti et al. ( | |
| Impaired by TG2576 KO Alzheimer mice (mouse) | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min prior to training | Improvement in mutants and wild-type | Comery et al. ( | |
| Impaired by APP-PS KO Alzheimer mice (mouse) | Rolipram 0.1 μM/kg for 3 weeks | Improvement when tested 2 months following 3-week treatment | Gong et al. ( | |
| Impaired by PDE4D KO (mouse) | – | Impairment LTM for context and cued fear | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Object recognition task (object memory, hippocampus and rhinal cortex) | Unimpaired young (rat) | Rolipram (0.01, 0.03 or 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) given: (1) 30 min before training, (2) directly after training, (3) 3 h after training | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg 3 h after T1) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Rutten et al. ( |
| Unimpaired young (rat) | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg, i.p.) given: (1) directly after training, (2) 1 h after training, (3) 3 h after training, (4) 6 h after training | Rolipram (0.03 mg/kg 3 h after T1) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Impaired by scopolamine, 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before training (rat) | Rolipram (0.03, 0.1 or 0.3 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before training | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg) reversed the scopolamine-induced STM deficit | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Impaired by acute tryptophan depletion, 3 h before training (rat) | Rolipram (0.01, 0.03 or 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before training | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg) reversed ATD induced STM deficit | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Subchronic treatment of rolipram (0.5 mg/kg, p.o.) for 5 days. Testing before, during (day 2–3) and after treatment (T1–T2 24 h) | Subchronic rolipram treatment improved object recognition memory. Timing of final dose did not affect performance | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Impaired by heterozygous CBP mutation (mouse) | Rolipram (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) or HT0712 (0.001–0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) 20 min before training | MED: 0.1 mg/kg for both drugs. Improved object recognition at 24 h | Bourtchouladze et al. ( | |
| Delayed responding (spatial working memory, prefrontal cortex) | Unimpaired young and aged-impaired (rhesus monkey) | Rolipram (0.01–100 μg/kg, i.m.) 1 h before testing | At 0.1 μg/kg, trend for improvement in young subjects. Aged subjects impaired by 10 μg/kg | Ramos et al. ( |
| Impaired by age (rhesus monkey) | Rolipram (0, 0.001–0.05 μg/kg, i.m.) 2 h before testing and guanfacine (0, 0.0001–0.01 mg/kg, i.m. (one animal 0.5 mg/kg)) | Rolipram alone no effect. Rolipram reversed beneficial effect of guanfacine on working memory | Ramos et al. ( | |
| Object retrieval (executive functioning and response inhibition, prefrontal cortex) | Unimpaired (cynomolgus macaque) | Rolipram (0.003, 0.01, or 0.03 mg/kg, i.m.) 30 min before testing | Rolipram (0.01, 0.33 mg/kg) improved object retrieval performance | Rutten et al. ( |
| Prepulse inhibition (information processing, frontal cortex) | Unimpaired (mouse) | Rolipram (0.1, 0.66, 1 or 10 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min before testing | Rolipram (0.66, 1, 10 mg/kg) increased PPI and decreased startle response | Kanes et al. ( |
| Impaired by | Rolipram attenuated the PPI deficit caused by d-amphetamine, but had no effect on startle response | Kanes et al. ( | ||
| Impaired by PDE4B KO (mouse) | – | Increased startle response and decreased PPI (independent of startle response) | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Impaired by | RO-20-1724 (0.25, 2.5, or 4 mg/kg, s.c.) or rolipram (mg/kg, s.c.), 5 min before testing | RO-20-1724 did not reverse PPI deficit caused by d-amphetamine | Halene and Siegel ( | |
| Startle response (nonassociative learning) | Unimpaired (zebrafish) | Rolipram (3, 10, or 30 μM) | Rolipram (3 μM) enhanced startle response | Best et al. ( |
| Acquisition of conditioned avoidance responding (learning, hippocampus) | Impaired by PDE4B KO (mouse) | – | No effect | Siuciak et al. ( |
| Auditory event-related potentials (information processing, frontal cortex) | Unimpaired (mouse) | RO-20-1724 (0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2.5 mg/kg, s.c.), 5 min before testing | First click: RO-20-1724 increased amplitude of P20 (at a dose of 0.25, 0.5, 1 mg/kg) and of N40 at a dose of (0.25, 0.5, 2.5 mg/kg) in CA3 area. No effects on second click | Halene and Siegel ( |
| Impaired by | RO-20-1724 (0.25 mg/kg, s.c.), 5 min before testing | First click: P20 no effect. N40 RO-20-1734 reversed deficit caused by d-amphetamine in CA3 area. No effects on second click | Halene and Siegel ( |
This table is an adapted and updated version of the overview (Table 3) in Blokland et al. (2006)
KO knockout, i.m. intramuscular, i.p. intraperitoneal, p.o. per os, s.c. subcutaneous, MEK MAPK/ERK kinase, T1 trial 1, T2 trial 2, ECS electroconvulsive shocks, ATD acute tryptophan depletion, ORT object recognition task, MED minimum effective dose
Overview of effects of PDE5-Is on cognition
| Task (cognitive process, area involved) | Model (species) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Object recognition task (object memory, hippocampus and rhinal cortex) | Unimpaired (rat) | Sildenafil citrate (1, 3, or 10 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before or immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | Sildenafil (3 mg/kg T0 or 10 mg/kg T1–30 min) improves memory consolidation | Prickaerts et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Zaprinast (3 or 10 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial (4 h interval T1–T2) | Zaprinast (10 mg/kg) improved memory consolidation | Prickaerts et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Sildenafil (1, 3, or 10 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | Sildenafil (3 mg/kg) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Prickaerts et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Vardenafil (0.1, 0.3, 1, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | Vardenafil (0.3 mg/kg) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Prickaerts et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (rat) | Vardenafil (1 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after, 1 h, 3 h or 6 h after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | Vardenafil (1 mg/kg immediately after T1) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse) | Sildenafil (0.3, 1 or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) immediately after first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | Sildenafil (1 mg/kg) improved memory consolidation in ORT | Rutten et al. ( | |
| Impaired by NOS inhibitor (rat) | 7-nitroindazole (10 or 30 mg/kg, i.p.); zaprinast (3 or 10 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial (1 h interval T1–T2) | Zaprinast (10 mg/kg) reversed the NOS-I (10 mg/kg) deficit in ORT | Prickaerts et al. ( | |
| Impaired by age, 3, 12, and 24 months old (rat) | Zaprinast (0.3 mg/kg, s.c.) 1 h before first trial or immediately after first trial (2 h interval T1–T2) | Zaprinast 1 h before T1 improved acquisition in 3-month-old animals. In addition, it improved consolidation in animals of 3 months when given immediately after T1 | Domek-Lopacinska and Strosznajder ( | |
| Adapted version of elevated plus-maze (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Unimpaired (rat) | Sildenafil (2, 4, or 8 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before or immediately after first trial | Sildenafil (8 mg/kg) before T1 marginally increased spatial memory acquisition. Sildenafil (2, 4, 8 mg/kg) immediately after T1 increased spatial memory retention | Singh and Parle ( |
| Unimpaired (mouse), age-impaired (mouse) | Sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial | Sildenafil improved spatial memory performance in young (0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg) and aged (0.25–1 mg/kg) animals | Patil et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse), age-impaired (mouse) | Zaprinast (0.5, 1 or 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial | Zaprinast improved spatial memory performance in young (1.0 and 2.0 mg/kg) and aged (0.5–2 mg/kg) animals | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by diabetes-STZ (rat) | Streptozotocin (STZ) (60 mg/kg, i.p.), sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (all doses) reversed STZ spatial memory deficits | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by diabetes-LPS (mouse) | Lipopolysaccharide (LPS: 50 μg, i.p.) and sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) or zaprinast (0.5, 1, or 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (0.5 and 1 mg/kg) and zaprinast (1 and 2 mg/kg) reversed LPS spatial memory deficits | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by electroconvulsive shock (rat) | Shocks (0.2 mA, 0.2 s/day for 15 days) sildenafil (0.5, 1, or 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (all doses) reversed spatial memory deficits | Patil et al. ( | |
| Y-maze (spatial memory, hippocampus and cerebellum) | Unimpaired (rat) | Vardenafil (3 mg/kg, p.o.) daily after last trial | No effects on spatial recognition | Prickaerts et al. ( |
| Impaired by hyperammonemia (rat) | Sildenafil (50 mg/L) in drinking water 2 days before training | Sildenafil (in drink water) reversed spatial recognition deficits | Erceg et al. ( | |
| Impaired by hyperammonemia (rat) | Ammonium acetate containing diet (28 days before testing), zaprinast (50 μM, 0.25 μL/h, 2 days before testing) in cerebral ventricle | Zaprinast (through minipump) reversed spatial recognition deficits | Erceg et al. ( | |
| Impaired by portacaval shunts (rat) | Portacaval shunt operation 28 days before test. Sildenafil (50 mg/L) in drinking water 2 days before training | Sildenafil (in drink water) reversed spatial recognition deficits | Erceg et al. ( | |
| Water escape task (spatial memory, (hippocampus) | Unimpaired (rat) | Zaprinast (10 mg/kg, i.p.) daily after last trial | No effects on acquisition or retention of spatial memory | Prickaerts et al. ( |
| Complex maze learning (learning, hippocampus) | Impaired by NOS inhibitor (rat) | L-NAME (60 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before training, sildenafil (1, 1.5, 3, or 4.5 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min before training | Sildenafil (1.5 mg/kg) attenuated the L-NAME deficit in maze learning | Devan et al. ( |
| Impaired by NOS inhibitor (rat) | L-NAME (0, 45 μg/kg, i.c.v.) 30 min before training, sildenafil (0, 1.5, or 3 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min before training | Sildenafil (3 mg/kg) attenuated the L-NAME deficit in maze learning | Devan et al. ( | |
| Active avoidance learning (hippocampus) | Impaired by scopolamine, 0.75 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before training (rat) | Sildenafil (1.5, 3, or 4.5 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min before training | Sildenafil (3 mg/kg) reversed the scopolamine deficit in active avoidance task | Devan et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (mouse) | Sildenafil (1, 3, 10, or 30 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before training or immediately after training | Sildenafil (3 mg/kg) improved performance (both 30 min before and immediately after training) in active avoidance | Baratti and Boccia ( | |
| Passive avoidance learning (hippocampus) | Unimpaired (rat) | Sildenafil (1, 3, 10, or 20 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training in young and old rats | Sildenafil has no effect on retention performance in passive avoidance | Shafiei et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (neonate chick) | Zaprinast (0.1–750 μM/side, i.c.) immediately after training | Zaprinast (>100 μM) enhanced early consolidation | Campbell and Edwards ( | |
| Unimpaired (young chick) | Zaprinast (100 μM/side, i.c.) immediately after training. Retention times between 10 and 180 min | Zaprinast impaired performance (at a retention of 40, 60, 90, and 120 min) | Edwards and Lindley ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse), age-impaired (mouse) | Sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial | Sildenafil improved consolidation in young (0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg) and aged (0.25–1 mg/kg) animals | Patil et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse), age-impaired (mouse) | Zaprinast (0.5, 1, or 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after first trial | Zaprinast improved spatial memory performance in young (1.0 and 2.0 mg/kg) and aged (0.5–2 mg/kg) animals | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by diabetes (rat) | STZ (60 mg/kg, i.p.), sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (all doses) reversed STZ memory deficit caused by diabetes | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by electroconvulsive shock (rat) | Shocks (0.2 mA, 0.2 s/day for 15 days), sildenafil (0.5, 1, 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (all doses) reversed memory deficit caused by ECS | Patil et al. ( | |
| Impaired by diabetes-LPS (mouse) | Lipopolysaccharide (LPS: 50 μg, i.p.) and sildenafil (0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg/kg, i.p.) or zaprinast (0.5, 1, 2 mg/kg, i.p.) immediately after training | Sildenafil (0.5 and 1 mg/kg) and zaprinast (1 and 2 mg/kg) reversed LPS induced memory deficits | Patil et al. ( | |
| Object retrieval (executive functioning and response inhibition, prefrontal cortex) | Unimpaired (cynomolgus macaque) | Sildenafil (0.3, 1, or 3 mg/kg, i.m.) 30 min before testing | Sildenafil (1, 3 mg/kg) improved object retrieval performance | Rutten et al. ( |
| Seven different psychophysical tests (psychophysical performance, various brain areas) | Unimpaired (human) | Sldenafil (100 mg, p.o.) 1 h before testing | Sildenafil enhanced performance on the simple reaction time test; other tests no effect | Grass et al. ( |
| Auditory selective attention and ERPs (attention, prefrontal cortex) | Unimpaired (human) | Sldenafil (100 mg, p.o.) 1 h before testing | Sildenafil had no effect on the behavioral measurements of attention. However, an increase in the ERP components Nd and P3 indicates an improvement of attention | Schultheiss et al. ( |
| Verbal recognition memory and ERPs (memory and information processing, hippocampus and frontal cortex) | Unimpaired (human) | Sildenafil (100 mg, p.o.) 1 h before testing | Sildenafil had no effect on the behavioral measurements of memory. However, a reduction in negativity between 150 and 250 ms might indicate an effect on information processing | Schultheiss et al. ( |
i.c.v. intracerebroventricular, i.c. intracerebral, i.p. intraperitoneal, LPS lipopolysaccharide, NOS nitric oxide synthase, ORT object recognition task, p.o. per os, T1 trial 1, T2 trial 2, STZ streptozotocin
Overview of effects of PDE9-I on cognition
| Task (cognitive process, area involved) | Model (species) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Object recognition task (object memory, hippocampus and rhinal cortex) | Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 73-6691 (0.1, 0.3, 1, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before T1 (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 73-6691 (0.1, 0.3 mg/kg) had an intermediate effect on memory consolidation | Van der Staay et al. ( |
| Passive avoidance (learning, hippocampus) | Impaired by scopolamine, 0.03 mg/kg, s.c., 30 min before testing (rat) | BAY 73-6691 (0.3, 1, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) 60 min before testing | BAY 73-6691 (1, 3 mg/kg) attenuated the scopolamine-induced retention deficit | Van der Staay et al. ( |
| Social recognition (social memory, hippocampus and amygdala) | Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 73-6691 (0, 0.03, 0.3, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) 60 min before the first trial (T1), immediately after T1 or 60 min before trial 2 (T2) (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 73-6691 (0.3, 3 mg/kg) 60 min before T1, or BAY 73-6691 (0.03, 0.3, 3 mg/kg) immediately after T1 and 60 min before T2 improved memory consolidation | Van der Staay et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (rat) | BAY 73-6691 (0 or 1 mg/kg, p.o.) 60 min before the first trial (T1) with a familiar juvenile or BAY 73-6691 (1 mg/kg, p.o.) 60 min before the first trial (T1) with a novel juvenile (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 73-6691 (1 mg/kg) improved memory consolidation with a familiar as well as a novel juvenile | Van der Staay et al. ( | |
| Unimpaired (mouse) | BAY 73-6691 (0, 0.03, 0.3, or 3 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before the first trial (24 h interval T1–T2) | BAY 73-6691 (0.3, 3 mg/kg) 30 min before T1 improved memory consolidation | Van der Staay et al. ( | |
| T-maze (working memory, hippocampus) | Impaired by MK-801, 0.06 mg/kg, s.c., 30 min before testing (mouse) | BAY 73-6691 (0, 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg, p.o.) 60 min before testing | BAY 73-6691 (10 mg/kg) attenuated the MK-801 induced deficit in alternation rate | Van der Staay et al. ( |
p.o. per os, T1 trial 1, T2 trial 2, s.c. subcutaneous
Overview of effects of PDE10-Is on cognition
| Task (cognitive process, area involved) | Model (species) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passive avoidance learning (hippocampus) | Impaired PDE10A KO (mouse) | – | Apparent effect, but this could be explained by a locomotor effect | Siuciak et al. ( |
| Impaired PDE10A KO (mouse) | – | No effect | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Acquisition of conditioned avoidance responding (CAR) (learning, hippocampus) | Impaired PDE10A KO (mouse) | – | PDE10A−/− mice learned the task as well as PDE10A+/+ mice, but needed more training | Siuciak et al. ( |
| Impaired by PDE10A KO; DBA1LacJ background (mouse) | – | KO mice learned the task as well as WT, but needed more training | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Impaired by PDE10A KO; C57BL/6N background (mouse) | – | KO mice learned needed more training and did not reach performance of WT | Siuciak et al. ( | |
| Morris water maze (spatial memory, hippocampus) | Impaired PDE10A KO (mouse) | – | Apparent effect, but this could be explained by a locomotor effect | Siuciak et al. ( |
| Unimpaired (mouse) | Chronic treatment of papaverine (0, 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg, s.c.) daily for 14 days. Then, same treatment either prior of 30 min after testing | Papaverine (5 mg/kg, after testing) impaired latency and distance. In addition, papaverine (20 mg/kg, 30 min before testing and 5 mg/kg, 30 min after testing) increased the time spend in the old platform quadrant in reversal learning | Hebb et al. ( | |
| Auditory gating (anesthetized) (information processing, frontal cortex) | Impaired by | TP-10 (0, 3 mg/kg); 5 min before testing | TP-10 reversed auditory gating deficit | Schmidt et al. ( |
| Prepulse inhibition (information processing, frontal cortex) | Unimpaired (mouse) | TP-10 (0, 0.32, 1, 3.2, or 10 mg/kg, s.c.) 30 min before testing | TP-10 had no effect on PPI or startle response | Schmidt et al. ( |
| Impaired by MK-801, 0.178 mg/kg, s.c., 30 min before testing (mouse) | TP-10 (0, 1, 3.2, or 10 mg/kg, s.c.) 30 min before testing | TP-10 did not reverse PPI deficit | Schmidt et al. ( | |
| Attention set-shifting task (attention, prefrontal cortex) | Impaired by subchronic PCP treatment, 5 mg/kg, i.p., twice a day for 7 days (rat) | Papaverine (0, 3, 10, or 30 mg/kg, i.p.) | Papaverine attenuated PCP induced deficits at all doses. No effect of papaverine on saline treated rats | Rodefer et al. ( |
CAR conditioned avoidance responding, i.p. intraperitoneal, i.v. intravenous, KO knockout, PCP phenylcyclohexylpiperidine, PPI prepulse inhibition, s.c. subcutaneous
Fig. 1Ca2+ entry through the postsynaptic ionotropic NMDA receptor triggers LTP induction. Ca2+ results in the activation of CaMKII (a specific form of CaMK). Activated CaMKII stimulates the insertion into the membrane of the ionotropic AMPA receptor, which is involved in regular signal transduction through the generation of excitatory postsynaptic potentials. In addition, CaMKII activates AC resulting in the production of the second messenger cAMP. The latter activates PKA, which has a positive effect on the transcription factor CREB (via MAP kinases possibly). CREB activation is known to result in an increased gene expression, including the genes for AMPA receptors and thus future signal transduction is enhanced. Ca2+ is also known to activate the enzyme NOS, which produces NO. The latter can activate GC, which produces the second messenger cGMP. There are indications that, postsynaptically, cGMP has similar effects as cAMP, but via the activation of PKG. NO is also known to act as a retrograde messenger and can thus stimulate presynaptic GC. It has been found that cGMP stimulates the synthesis and release of glutamate via PKG
Fig. 2A schematic classification of memory identifying four distinct types of memory stages: sensory store, short-term memory (STM)/working memory (WM), intermediate memory (IM), and long-term memory (LTM). In the sensory store, all the incoming information from the sensory organs is accumulated and, depending on attention processes certain items, can be transferred to STM/WM (Baddeley 2003). These stores generally have limited capacity and duration. Information can be stored for a longer period of time ranging from hours to years. It is suggested that there are two stages involved, that is, IM and LTM (Kesner and Hopkins 2006). The time frames of the three stages of STM, IM, and LTM are not clearly defined and depend on the definitions used by the researcher. In addition, the exact role of different brain areas in this respect is not fully clear yet. But it is evident that the hippocampus plays a key role and is particularly involved in IM processes (Kesner and Hopkins 2006). We propose that information is processed from STM to IM via early consolidation and subsequently from IM to LTM via late consolidation. In addition, we assume that STM is supported by transient changes in neuronal transmission, not requiring gene expression and protein synthesis whereas IM and LTM are maintained by more stable and permanent neuronal changes that are dependent on protein synthesis (Izquierdo et al. 2002). cGMP-specific PDE-Is might be able to influence STM via enhanced LTP1. In addition, cAMP-specific PDE-Is influence STM probably via an increased neurotransmitter release directly. Furthermore, LTP2 might represent IM and should be specifically influenced by cGMP-specific PDE inhibition. Finally, LTM is likely represented by LTP3 which should be influenced by cAMP-specific PDE inhibition