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Selective white matter pathology induces a specific impairment in spatial working memory
Authors:Coltman Robin  Spain Aisling  Tsenkina Yanina  Fowler Jill H  Smith Jessica  Scullion Gillian  Allerhand Mike  Scott Fiona  Kalaria Rajesh N  Ihara Masafumi  Daumas Stephanie  Deary Ian J  Wood Emma  McCulloch James  Horsburgh Karen
Affiliation:aCentre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology and Centre for Cognitive and Neural Systems, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;bDepartment of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;cInstitute for Ageing and Health, Campus for Ageing and Vitality, University of Newcastle, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK;dDepartment of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
Abstract:
The integrity of the white matter is critical in regulating efficient neuronal communication and maintaining cognitive function. Damage to brain white matter putatively contributes to age-related cognitive decline. There is a growing interest in animal models from which the mechanistic basis of white matter pathology in aging can be elucidated but to date there has been a lack of systematic behavior and pathology in the same mice. Anatomically widespread, diffuse white matter damage was induced, in 3 different cohorts of C57Bl/6J mice, by chronic hypoperfusion produced by bilateral carotid stenosis. A comprehensive assessment of spatial memory (spatial reference learning and memory; cohort 1) and serial spatial learning and memory (cohort 2) using the water maze, and spatial working memory (cohort 3) using the 8-arm radial arm maze, was conducted. In parallel, a systematic assessment of white matter components (myelin, axon, glia) was conducted using immunohistochemical markers (myelin-associated glycoprotein [MAG], degraded myelin basic protein [dMBP], anti-amyloid precursor protein [APP], anti-ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule [Iba-1]). Ischemic neuronal perikarya damage, assessed using histology (hematoxylin and eosin; H&E), was absent in all shams but was present in some hypoperfused mice (2/11 in cohort 1, 4/14 in cohort 2, and 17/24 in cohort 3). All animals with neuronal perikaryal damage were excluded from further study. Diffuse white matter damage occurred, throughout the brain, in all hypoperfused mice in each cohort and was essentially absent in sham-operated controls. There was a selective impairment in spatial working memory, with all other measures of spatial memory remaining intact, in hypoperfused mice with selective white matter damage. The results demonstrate that diffuse white matter pathology, in the absence of gray matter damage, induces a selective impairment of spatial working memory. This highlights the importance of assessing parallel pathology and behavior in the same mice.
Keywords:Cognitive decline   Axonal damage   Myelin damage   Hypoperfusion
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