Abstract
The benzodiazepine receptor partial inverse agonist RO 15-3505 was tested for its ability to improve impaired recent memory of aged mice. All mice successfully acquired a learning set for accurate identification of the correct arm of a T-maze and could perform with nearly 100% accuracy after 1-min delays. However, performance of the aged mice approached chance levels after 2-h delays. When injected just before testing on a series of 2-h retention tests, RO 15-3505 (from 2.5-3505 (from 2.5-10.0 mg/kg) resulted in a marked improvement of response accuracy. These results confirm the role of benzodiazepine receptor mechanisms in the modulation of memory processes, and suggest that the memory-facilitating effects RO 15-3505 or similar benzodiazepine receptor ligands may be generalized to aged rodents with impaired memory function.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Khan, I. D., Sashindran, V., Sandhu, G. S., Khan, S., Rajmohan, K., Pandey, A. K., … Ranjan, M. (2018). Outbreak of Wilderness/Backcountry/Travelers’ Diarrhea at a Himalayan Base Camp at 4000 m/13,125 ft. International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health, 6(1), 25–29. https://doi.org/10.15171/ijtmgh.2018.05
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.