Letter to editor - (2011)10, 596 - 597 |
Treadmill Exercise Improves Impaired Spatial Memory Function in Partial androgen Deficiency Rat Model |
Noboru Hasegawa1, Miyako Mochizuki2, Lin Mei3 |
Dear Editor-in-Chief |
Elderly men have a relative deficiency of testosterone compared with younger men (i.e., partial androgen deficiency of the aged male (PADAM)). In the cognitive impairment in elderly men, testosterone levels may be significantly associated with memory and visuospatial function (Warren, Exercise alter specific aspects of delayed long-term memory in young adults (Coles and Tomporowski, In this report, we examined whether exercise improved spatial long-term memory in gonadectomized (GND) rat using a win-shift strategy. The animal procedures were reviewed and approved by the Animal Research Committee of Gifu Women’s University and the Japanese Government Animal Protection and Management Law. Male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 350 ± 10 g were obtained from Charles River Japan Inc. (Tokyo, Japan) at 8 weeks of age. The rats were housed in standard cages and fed with standard laboratory chow and tap water ad libitum. The rats were assigned randomly to three different groups: GND sedentary (n = 6), GND-exercise (n = 6), and the sham-operated (n = 6). Bilateral gonadectomy was performed under thiopental anesthesia, and all animals were killed by decapitation. The sham rats (Sham) were subjected to the same general surgical procedure, except that the testes were not excised. Brain dissections of the hippocampus were performed according to a previously described method (Hasegawa and Mochizuki, The radial arm maze consisted of eight arms, extending radially from a central area (Brain Science Idea. Co. Ltd., Tokyo). The GND and Sham rats were housed for 1 month and subjected to a win-shift task according to previous described methods (Espina-Marchant et al., In the present experiment, we investigated the effects of exercise in GND rats. Exercise training consisted of continuous running on a motor-driven rodent treadmill for 30 min in trained group. Rats were made to run from 10 min/day at 13 m/min, 6°slope for a week, up to 60 min/day the last 15 days. Exercise improved the delayed long-term memory impairment by GND ( Hippocampal testosterone and estradiol were measured by a commercial EIA kit (Cayman Chemical Co., USA). The protein content was determined using BCA protein assay reagent (Pierce, IL, USA). Results are expressed as the mean ± SEM. Student’s t -test was used for two-group statistical comparison. In the present experiment, the mean level of hippocampal testosterone in the GND and exercised GND rats were 10.36 ± 0.45 pg mg-1 protein (n = 6) and 14.45 ± 0.04 pg·mg-1 protein (n=6), respectively. The mean level of estradiol in the GND and exercised GND rats were 10.36 ± 0.45 pg·mg-1 protein (n = 6) and 14.45 ± 0.04 pg·mg-1 protein (n = 6), respectively. These results showed that exercise significantly increased hippocampal testosterone and estradiol content in the GND rats (p < 0.01). The hippocampus is essentially involved in learning and memory (Harooni et al., These results suggested that treadmill exercise improved the spatial memory impairment in androgen-deficient rats by increase of testosterone and estradiol content in the hippocampus and exercise improved spatial memory function. |