|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Reactivity to object and spatial novelty is normal in older Ts65Dn mice that model Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease.

First Author  Hyde LA Year  2002
Journal  Brain Res Volume  945
Issue  1 Pages  26-30
PubMed ID  12113948 Mgi Jnum  J:78188
Mgi Id  MGI:2183693 Doi  10.1016/s0006-8993(02)02500-3
Citation  Hyde LA, et al. (2002) Reactivity to object and spatial novelty is normal in older Ts65Dn mice that model Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease. Brain Res 945(1):26-30
abstractText  Ts65Dn mice, a model for Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease, have a spontaneous age-related reduction of cholinergic markers in medial septal neurons, hippocampal abnormalities, and an age-related learning deficit in a task that requires an intact hippocampus. Others have shown that when normal rodents explored an open field with objects, they detected the displacement of some of the familiar objects within the arena (spatial novelty) and the presence of a new object (object novelty); whereas rodents with hippocampal, fornix, or neonatal selective basal forebrain cholinergic lesions were impaired in detecting spatial, but not object, novelty. In this study, both control and Ts65Dn mice responded to both the spatial and object changes. This unexpected finding could have several explanations. One may be related to recent studies that suggest that only rats with neonatal, but not adult, basal forebrain cholinergic 192 IgG-saporin lesions are impaired in reacting to spatial novelty.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

3 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression