| Literature DB >> 25870536 |
Satu Mering1, Jukka Jolkkonen2.
Abstract
Environmental enrichment provides laboratory animals with novelty and extra space, allowing different forms of multisensory stimulation ranging from social grouping to enhanced motor activity. At the extreme end of the spectrum, one can have a super-enriched environment. Environmental enrichment is believed to result in improved cognitive and sensorimotor functions both in naïve rodents and in animals with brain lesions such as those occurring after a stroke. Robust behavioral effects in animals which have suffered a stroke are probably related not only to neuronal plasticity in the perilesional cortex but also in remote brain areas. There is emerging evidence to suggest that testing restorative therapies in an enriched environment can maximize treatment effects, e.g., the perilesional milieu seems to be more receptive to concomitant pharmacotherapy and/or cell therapy. This review provides an updated overview on the effect of an enriched environment in stroke animals from the practical points to be considered when planning experiments to the mechanisms explaining why combined therapies can contribute to behavioral improvement in a synergistic manner.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral ischemia; environmental enrichment; plasticity; rodent; sensorimotor functions
Year: 2015 PMID: 25870536 PMCID: PMC4378295 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Environmental enrichment. (A) Different kinds of rodent enrichment (picture from Satu Mering). (B) Super-enriched environment provides multiple and complex stimuli to the animals (modified from Sivenius et al., 2002). Enriched environment usually consists of large cage to provide spatial stimuli, ladders and running wheel for sensorimotor and motor exercise and social interactions of 6–8 animals. In addition, replaceable objects such as toys provide novelty, all of which can enhance brain plasticity leading to improved cognitive and sensorimotor recovery after brain insults.
Effect of therapies paired with housing in enriched environment on sensorimotor behavior in rats subjected to cerebral ischemia.
| Transplantation of fetal neocortex | distal pMCAO in hypertensive rats | rotating pole | better postural and locomotor tail position by combined therapy | Mattsson et al., |
| Atipamezole 1 mg/kg for 10 d | tMCAO, 120 min occlusion | limb-placing, beam-walking, foot-slip | combined therapy improved limb-placing and foot-slip test immediately after administration | Puurunen et al., |
| Selegiline 0.5 mg/kg for 30 d | tMCAO, 120 min occlusion | limb-placing, foot-slip, Montoya's staircase | additive improvement by combined therapy in Montoya's staircase | Puurunen et al., |
| Transplantation of mice SVZ cells | endothelin-1 | cylinder test | behavioral recovery facilitated only when cell transplants were combined with EE | Hicks et al., |
| Retinoic acid enriched died on post-operative days 7–41 | tMCAO, 90 min occlusion | cylinder, tapered/ledged beam, forelimb placing | combined treatment enhanced neurogenesis but not behavioral recovery | Plane et al., |
| Transplantation of hESCs | distal pMCAO | cylinder test, Montoya's staircase | minor improvement in the cylinder test | Hicks et al., |
| Amphetamine 2 mg/kg during the first post-operative week | distal pMCAO | ladder walk, skilled forelimb reaching | almost completely recovery in 8 weeks by EE, amphetamine and focused therapy | Papadopoulos et al., |
| Atipamezole 1 mg/kg for post-operative days 2–8 | distal pMCAO | ladder rung walk, Montoya's staircase | even a short term treatment when combined with EE improved recovery | Beltran et al., |
| Inosine i.c.v. for 4 weeks starting 3 days after stroke | lesion of the caudal forelimb motor area by Rose Bengal | single pellet reaching | inosine combined with enriched environment restored forelimb use | Zai et al., |
| Epidermal growth factor and erythropoietin i.c.v. for 2 weeks | cortical endothelin-1 | cylinder test, Montoya's staircase | acceleration in recovery in the staircase | Jeffers et al., |
EE, enriched environment; i.c.v., intracerebroventricular; hESCs, human embryonic stem cell-derived neural progenitor cells; pMCAO, permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion; SVZ, subventricular zone; tMCAO, transient middle cerebral artery occlusion.