Cognitive Dysfunction and Anxiety Resulting from Synaptic Downscaling, Hippocampal Atrophy, and Ventricular Enlargement with Intracerebroventricular Streptozotocin Injection in Male Wistar Rats.
Avishek RoySakshi SharmaTapas Chandra NagJatinder KatyalYogendra Kumar GuptaSuman JainPublished in: Neurotoxicity research (2022)
Insulin-resistant brain state is proposed to be the early sign of Alzheimer's disease (AD), which can be studied in the intracerebroventricular streptozotocin (ICV-STZ) rodent model. ICV-STZ is reported to induce sporadic AD with the majority of the disease hallmarks as phenotype. On the other hand, available experimental evidence has used varying doses of STZ (< 1 to 3 mg/kg) and studied its effect for different study durations, ranging from 14 to 270 days. Though these studies suggest 3 mg/kg of ICV-STZ to be the optimum dose for progressive pathogenesis, the reason for such is elusive. Here, we sought to investigate the mechanism of action of 3 mg/kg ICV-STZ on cognitive and non-cognitive aspects at a follow-up interval of 2 weeks for 2 months. On the 60th day, we examined the layer thickness, cell density, ventricular volume, spine density, protein expression related to brain metabolism, and mitochondrial function by histological examination. The findings suggest a progressive loss of a spatial, episodic, and avoidance memory with an increase in anxiety in a span of 2 months. Furthermore, hippocampal neurodegeneration, ventricular enlargement, diffused amyloid plaque deposition, loss of spine in the dentate gyrus, and imbalance in energy homeostasis were found on the 60th day post-injection. Interestingly, AD rats showed a uniform fraction of time spent in four quadrants of the water maze with a change in strategy when they were exposed to height. Our findings reveal that ICV-STZ injection at a dose of 3 mg/kg can cause cognitive and neuropsychiatric abnormalities due to structural loss both at the neuronal as well as the synaptic level, which is tightly associated with the change in neuronal metabolism.
Keyphrases
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- cerebral ischemia
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- multiple sclerosis
- type diabetes
- ultrasound guided
- white matter
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- catheter ablation
- body mass index
- stem cells
- blood brain barrier
- working memory
- cell therapy
- brain injury
- sleep quality
- genome wide
- prefrontal cortex
- atrial fibrillation
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- depressive symptoms
- skeletal muscle
- weight loss
- case control
- preterm birth
- glycemic control
- temporal lobe epilepsy