| Literature DB >> 25637779 |
John C Dalrymple-Alford1, Bruce Harland2, Elena A Loukavenko2, Brook Perry2, Stephanie Mercer2, David A Collings3, Katharina Ulrich4, Wickliffe C Abraham4, Neil McNaughton4, Mathieu Wolff5.
Abstract
Injury to the anterior thalamic nuclei (ATN) and their neural connections is the most consistent neuropathology associated with diencephalic amnesia. ATN lesions in rats produce memory impairments that support a key role for this region within an extended hippocampal system of complex overlapping neural connections. Environmental enrichment is a therapeutic tool that produces substantial, although incomplete, recovery of memory function after ATN lesions, even after the lesion-induced deficit has become established. Similarly, the neurotrophic agent cerebrolysin, also counters the negative effects of ATN lesions. ATN lesions substantially reduce c-Fos expression and spine density in the retrosplenial cortex, and reduce spine density on CA1 neurons; only the latter is reversed by enrichment. We discuss the implications of this evidence for the cognitive thalamus, with a proposal that there are genuine interactions among different but allied thalamo-cortical systems that go beyond a simple summation of their separate effects.Entities:
Keywords: CA1; Cerebrolysin; Enrichment; Retrosplenial; Spines; Thalamic amnesia
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25637779 DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2014.12.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosci Biobehav Rev ISSN: 0149-7634 Impact factor: 8.989