Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 www.elsevier.com/locate/jphysparis Pharmacological and molecular enhancement of learning in aging and Alzheimer’s disease John F. Disterhoft *, M. Matthew Oh Department of Physiology and Institute for Neuroscience, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 303 E Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611-3008, USA Abstract When animals learn hippocampus-dependent associative and spatial tasks such as trace eyeblink conditioning and the water maze, CA1 hippocampal neurons become more excitable as a result of reductions in the post-burst, slow afterhyperpolarization. The calcium-activated potassium current that mediates this afterhyperpolarization is activated by the calcium influx that occurs when a series of action potentials fire and serves as a modulator of neuronal firing frequency. As a result, spike frequency accommodation is also reduced after learning. Neuronal calcium buffering processes change and/or voltage-dependent calcium currents increase during aging; leading to enhancements in the slow afterhyperpolarization, increased spike frequency accommodation and age-associated impairments in learning. We describe a series of studies done to characterize this learning-specific enhancement in intrinsic neuronal excitability and its converse in aging brain. We have also combined behavioral pharmacology and biophysics in experiments demonstrating that compounds that increase neuronal excitability in CA1 pyramidal neurons also enhance learning rate of hippocampus-dependent tasks, especially in aging animals. The studies reviewed here include those using nimodipine, an L-type calcium current blocker that tends to cross the bloodbrain barrier; metrifonate, a cholinesterase inhibitor; CI1017, a muscarinic cholinergic agonist; and galantamine, a combined cholinesterase inhibitor and nicotinic agonist. Since aging is the chief risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, a disease that targets the hippocampus and associated brain regions and markedly impairs hippocampus-dependent learning, these compounds have potential use as treatments for this disease. Galantamine has been approved by the USDA for this purpose. Finally, we have extended our studies to the TG2576 transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), that overproduces amyloid precursor protein (APP) and increases levels of toxic b-amyloid in the brain. Not only do these mice show deficits in hippocampus-dependent learning as they age, but their hippocampal neurons show a reduced capacity to increase their levels of intrinsic excitability with reductions in the slow afterhyperpolarization after application of the muscarinic agonist carbachol. These TG2576 APP overproducing mice were crossed with BACE1 knockout mice, that do not produce b-amyloid because cleavage of APP by the b-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) is a critical step in its formation. Not only was hippocampus-dependent learning rescued in the bigenic TG2576-BACE1 mice, but the capacity of hippocampal neurons to show normal enhancements of intrinsic excitability was restored. The series of studies reviewed here support our hypothesis that enhancement in intrinsic excitability by reductions in calcium-activated potassium currents in hippocampal neurons is an important cellular mechanism for hippocampus-dependent learning. ! 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Afterhyperpolarization; BACE; Calcium channel; Cholinesterase inhibitor; Muscarinic; TG2576; Eyeblink conditioning 1. Introduction One of the most troubling concomitants of aging for many individuals is the impairment of learning and mem* Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 312 503 7982; fax: +1 312 503 2090. E-mail address: [email protected] (J.F. Disterhoft). 0928-4257/$ - see front matter ! 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.jphysparis.2005.12.079 ory which often occurs even with ‘‘normal’’ aging. We have been exploring the neuronal changes that occur during aging and contribute to learning deficits. We have been particularly interested in alterations of the slow outward potassium currents, including calcium-mediated potassium currents, as related to acquisition of hippocampus-dependent behavioral tasks and to age. The currents studied J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 are the major components of the post-burst afterhyperpolarization and help determine the level of spike frequency accommodation in hippocampal pyramidal neurons. Eyeblink conditioning and water maze place learning have been combined with in vitro biophysical measures from the hippocampal circuit of young and aging rabbits and rats to define functional changes in hippocampal pyramidal neurons in learning-intact as compared to learningimpaired animals. Although most of the work that we have done has concentrated on normally aging animals, by extension our research is relevant to understanding the mechanisms of Alzheimer’s disease, a disease whose greatest risk factor is age and that has grown in importance as the population is living longer on average. In an attempt to contribute to the development of mechanism-based disease treatments, we have investigated a series of pharmacological manipulations that enhance learning in aging as predicted by their effects on slow, calcium-activated potassium currents in hippocampal pyramidal neurons. Two to four million people in the United States have been estimated to suffer from Alzheimer’s disease in the late 1990s with this number predicted to climb steadily with increasing life span (Brookmeyer et al., 1998; Hebert et al., 2003). Although at present there is no cure for the disease, there are five compounds that have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of the disease in the United States. Tacrine (Cognex"), donepezil (Aricept"), rivastigmine (Exelon") and galantamine (Reminyl") are cholinesterase inhibitors that prevent the breakdown of acetylcholine to its component parts (acetylCoA and choline). Memantine (Namenda") is an uncompetitive antagonist to the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor that is thought to help patients with Alzheimer’s disease by limiting calcium entry into neurons through the NMDA receptors. In this review, we will discuss our experiences with four compounds (including galantamine) that have been shown to ameliorate age-related learning deficits. We should first describe the behavioral tasks and the in vitro biophysical measurement that we use in our work and that form the basis for our behavioral pharmacological studies. We have been particularly interested in behavioral tasks that depend upon the hippocampus for their acquisition, given that such learning tasks are particularly likely to be impaired during aging and especially Alzheimer’s disease. The hippocampus has been demonstrated to be critical for the ability of humans to form new declarative memories that we commonly think of as cognitive or conceptual learning in humans, in contrast to procedural, sensorimotor learning. Therefore, we have concentrated considerable effort on understanding the mechanisms associated with learning in hippocampal pyramidal neurons. In experimental animals, many behavioral tasks that depend on the hippocampus involve spatial or temporal learning. One behavioral task that we have successfully used over the years is trace eyeblink conditioning. In this task, the subject is presented with a neutral, conditioning stimulus 181 Fig. 1. Percent of rats reaching a learning criterion of 70% late CRs at any time during the trace 250 conditioning sessions. The percent of animals who learned the trace eyeblink conditioning task decreased as a function of age; the percent of animals classified as non-learners increased as a function of age. The old group (27–29 months) demonstrates the age at which learning deficits may be present in half of the population. Reprinted from Knuttinen et al. (2001a), Copyright 2001, with permission from Elsevier. (usually a brief tone) that does not elicit an eyeblink response prior to training. The conditioning stimulus is followed by a temporal gap (trace) before an unconditioned stimulus (usually an airpuff to the cornea that always elicits an eyeblink response) is presented. This Pavlovian task is a very simple, but surprisingly, very difficult task for the aging population to learn (Knuttinen et al., 2001a; Knuttinen et al., 2001b; Thompson et al., 1996a) (Fig. 1). Over half of normal aging rabbits (Thompson et al., 1996a) and rats (Knuttinen et al., 2001a) failed to acquire this task; and those that did learn the task, did so at a slower rate, as compared to the young animals (Thompson et al., 1996a). Additionally, it has been repeatedly demonstrated that an intact hippocampus is a prerequisite for the subjects to bridge the temporal gap (trace) between the conditioning stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus (McGlinchey-Berroth et al., 1997; Moyer et al., 1990; Weiss et al., 1999). A key in vitro biophysical measure that we examine from hippocampal pyramidal neurons is the post-burst afterhyperpolarization (AHP). The AHP is an intrinsic, post-synaptic, membrane property of a neuron that serves to limit the firing of action potentials during a long period of membrane depolarization caused by direct current injection or by high frequency sustained excitation of the neuron – a process known as spike-frequency adaptation (accommodation). The slow, post-burst AHP is mediated by a calcium-activated outward potassium current that is mediated by the calcium influx associated with action potentials (Hotson and Prince, 1980; Lancaster and Adams, 1986; Landfield and Pitler, 1984; Power et al., 2002; Schwartzkroin and Stafstrom, 1980; Storm, 1990). The AHP and the currents underlying the AHP are greatly 182 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 Fig. 2. The post-burst afterhyperpolarization (A) and the currents underlying it (B) are significantly enhanced in hippocampal pyramidal neurons from aging animals as compared to that from young animals. Reprinted with permission from Power et al. (2002), Copyright 2002 by the Society for Neuroscience. enhanced in hippocampal pyramidal neurons from aging animals as compared to those from the young (Kumar and Foster, 2002; Landfield and Pitler, 1984; Moyer and Disterhoft, 1994; Moyer et al., 1992; Power et al., 2002) (Fig. 2). Thus, this enhanced AHP in neurons of aging subjects would make them less excitable and limit these neurons from firing at a high sustained rate. We have examined the relationship between learned behaviors and the AHP in a variety of contexts. We initially (Disterhoft et al., 1986) reported that the AHP was reduced in CA1 hippocampal neurons from rabbits that learned the delay eyeblink conditioning task as compared to those from naı¨ve and pseudoconditioned rabbits (Fig. 3). Pseudoconditioned rabbits received equal numbers of the two stimuli as the trained rabbits, but the two stimuli were presented in a random order and unpaired; i.e., the CS and the US were never presented together in an associative fashion. We suggested that this reduction in the AHP would increase neuronal excitability and should contribute to the increased firing rate of single CA1 pyramidal neurons that had been observed in vivo during eyeblink conditioning (Berger et al., 1976; Berger and Thompson, 1977, 1978; McEchron and Disterhoft, 1997, 1999; Weiss et al., 1996). This finding has led to numerous discoveries including that the alteration of the AHP is post-synaptic, and that spike frequency accommodation is also reduced in CA1 neurons after learning the delay eyeblink conditioning task (Coulter et al., 1989). These findings have been extended to trace eyeblink conditioning in rabbits (Fig. 4) (Moyer et al., 1996; Thompson et al., 1996b) and rats (Kuo et al., 2004; Oh et al., 1999a). Trace conditioning is a version of the task that is hippocampus-dependent in which a blank, trace period is inserted between the tone CS and the air puff US. In addition, reductions in both AHP and accommodation were observed in CA1 neurons from aging animals that were trained and learned the trace eyeblink conditioning task, such that the AHP and accommodation observed in these neurons were nearly identical to that observed in CA1 neurons from young animals that learned the task (Fig. 5) (Moyer et al., 2000). Aging animals that received more paired training trials but did not learn, showed no reduction in the AHP or accommodation as compared to naı¨ve animals. These findings support the working hypotheses that the AHP and accommodation of CA1 neurons from aging rabbits are potentially ‘‘plastic’’ and may be reduced; and that aging rabbits that are trained but fail to acquire the task may have neurons with too large an AHP to allow learning to occur and/or reduced capacity for reducing the AHP. This hypothesis is presumably relevant to explaining the mechanism for age-associated learning deficits in other mammals, including humans. 2. Nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel antagonist Fig. 3. AHP after one spike in a naı¨ve, pseudoconditioned, and conditioned neuron. A 100-ms depolarizing current pulse sufficient to elicit one action potential was injected into the cell. The AHP can be seen by comparing the voltage response following the depolarizing pulse to the baseline (indicated by the dashed line to facilitate comparison). The point where the AHP was measured in these traces is indicated by the arrow. Note that the AHP is considerably reduced in the conditioned as compared to the naı¨ve and pseudoconditioned neuron. One trace is illustrated for each neuron. Reprinted with permission from reference Disterhoft et al. (1986). Nimodipine is an L-type calcium channel antagonist that readily crosses the blood brain barrier (van den Kerckhoff and Drewes, 1989). It has been demonstrated in rabbits to enhance blood flow in the brain as a direct consequence of vasodilation (Haws et al., 1983). Administration of nimodipine has been shown to be beneficial to patients after an ischemic stroke (Gelmers, 1984); however, this has been recently challenged (Horn et al., 2001). More importantly, in double-blind clinical trials, nimodipine was found to be beneficial in improving the cognitive deficits observed in elderly patients with dementia (Ban et al., 1990; Tollefson, 1990). Therefore, we investigated the J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 183 Fig. 4. Acquisition of hippocampus-dependent trace eyeblink conditioning increased excitability of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. (A) Voltage trace shows an overlay of recordings of the post-burst AHPs in CA1 neurons from a naive rabbit (Naive) and from trace-conditioned rabbits studied 24 h after initial learning (Trace 24 h) or 24 h after receiving an additional training session given 14 d after initial learning (Retention). The resting membrane potentials for these cells were approximately 66 mV, with action potentials truncated for visualization of the AHP. The AHP was measured for 5 s beginning after a 100 ms depolarizing current injection (solid black line), with minimal current (!0.6 nA) required to reliably evoke a burst of four action potentials. (B) Examples of typical accommodation responses in CA1 pyramidal cells from rabbits: 24 h after pseudoconditioning (Pseudo), 24 h after acquisition of trace conditioning (Trace 24 h), and 24 h after receiving an additional training session 14 d after acquisition (Retention). Notice that although the cell from the trace-conditioned rabbit fired more action potentials, accommodation was certainly not abolished (as evidenced by the increase in interspike interval with time during the 800 ms depolarizing stimulus) but, rather, was significantly and transiently reduced after learning. Reprinted with permission from reference Moyer et al. (1996), Copyright 1996 by the Society for Neuroscience. potential benefits of calcium channel blockade, with nimodipine, in reversing the age-related learning deficit on the trace eyeblink conditioning task; and also, investigated whether the biophysical properties of hippocampal pyramidal neurons may have contributed to the amelioration of the learning deficit. Nimodipine reversed the age-related learning impairment of aged animals on the trace eyeblink conditioning task. Treatment with nimodipine allowed the aged rabbits to learn the task at a very similar rate as young rabbits (Fig. 6) (Deyo et al., 1989; Straube et al., 1990). No significant impact was observed in young animals treated with nimodipine. The behavioral rescue in aged animals may in part be due to the enhanced neuronal activity of hippocampal pyramidal neurons in vivo, as administration of nimodipine greatly enhanced the basal firing rate of CA1 pyramidal neurons (Thompson et al., 1990). Thus, we examined the effects of nimodipine on the biophysical properties of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons in vitro. Nimodipine significantly enhanced the neuronal excitability of CA1 neurons in vitro by reducing the post-burst AHP and the accommodation of these neurons. The normally enlarged post-burst AHP in CA1 neurons from aging animals (Landfield and Pitler, 1984) was significantly reduced by bath application of nimodipine (Fig. 7) (Moyer et al., 1992). The concentration of nimodipine necessary to significantly reduce the AHP and accommodation in neurons from aged animals was significantly less than that needed to produce similar reductions in neurons from young animals (Moyer et al., 1992). In addition, the plateau phase of the calcium action potential (Moyer and Disterhoft, 1994) and the currents underlying the AHP (Power et al., 2002) in hippocampal CA1 neurons were also significantly reduced by the bath application of nimodipine. More importantly, the concentration of nimodipine that was bath applied to produce the significant enhancement of the CA1 neurons from aged animals in vitro was similar to the dosage of nimodipine that was beneficial to reverse the learning impairment in aged animals in vivo. Therefore, the behavioral effects of nimodipine may be in part be due to the enhanced activity of hippocampal pyramidal neurons via reduced calcium entry through the L-type calcium channel, which led to the significant 184 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 Fig. 5. Acquisition of hippocampus dependent trace eyeblink conditioning increased excitability of aging rabbit hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. (A) Effects of trace conditioning on the size of the post-burst AHP. (A1) Overlay of voltage recordings of the post-burst AHP in CA1 neurons from an aging naive rabbit (Naive), an aging rabbit that showed <15% CRs after 15 sessions (Slow), and an aging trace-conditioned rabbit (Trace). The resting membrane potentials of these cells were approximately 65 mV, with action potentials truncated for visualization of the AHP. The AHP was measured for 5 s beginning after a 100 ms depolarizing current injection (solid black line), with minimal current (!0.6 nA) required to reliably evoke a burst of four action potentials. (A2) Mean effects of trace eyeblink conditioning on post-burst AHP amplitude in aging rabbit CA1 neurons. Notice that, after learning, the AHP was significantly reduced compared with naive and slow-learning aging controls. (B) Typical examples of accommodation responses in CA1 pyramidal cells from aging naive (Naive), aging slow-learning (Slow), and aging trace-conditioned (Trace) rabbits. Although the cell from the traceconditioned rabbit fired more action potentials, accommodation was not abolished, as evidenced by the increase in interspike interval with time during the 800 ms depolarizing stimulus (solid black line), but rather was significantly reduced after learning. The resting potentials of these cells were approximately 67 mV. Reprinted with permission from reference Moyer et al. (2000), Copyright 2000 by the Society for Neuroscience. Fig. 6. Summary of the mean number of trials to reach the criterion of eight CRs in any block of 10 trials in each of the trace-conditioned treatment groups. Error bars indicate SEM (n = 6). Reprinted with permission from reference Deyo et al. (1989), Copyright 1989 by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Fig. 7. Nimodipine significantly enhanced neuronal excitability of CA1 neurons from aging rabbits by reducing the post-burst AHP (A) and spikefrequency accommodation (B). Reprinted with permission from reference Moyer et al. (1992), Copyright 1992 by the American Physiological Society. reduction of the normally enlarged post-burst AHP of CA1 neurons in aged animals. 3. Metrifonate, a cholinesterase inhibitor Metrifonate is an organophosphate compound that undergoes nonenzymatic conversion to 0,0-dimethyl 2,2dichlorovinyl phosphate which produces the long lasting inhibition of both acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (Nordgren et al., 1978; Schmidt et al., 1998). Treatments with metrifonate have reversed the behavioral deficits observed in acquiring passive and active avoidance, Morris water maze, and radial-arm maze tasks by normal aging, medial-septum lesioned, or scopolaminetreated subjects (Dachir et al., 1997; Der Staay et al., 1996; Itoh et al., 1997; Riekkinen et al., 1997; Riekkinen et al., 1996). More importantly, in double-blind clinical trials, the cognitive impairments observed in Alzheimer’s disease patients were alleviated by metrifonate-treatment (Cummings et al., 1998; Morris et al., 1998; Pettigrew et al., 1998). Thus, we were interested in observing metrifonate’s effects on acquisition of trace eyeblink conditioning in aging rabbits and on biophysical properties of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons in vitro. Chronic, oral treatment with metrifonate ameliorated the learning deficit observed in aging rabbits (Fig. 8) (Kronforst-Collins et al., 1997a,b). This amelioration was dependent on AChE inhibition. However, the memory of the task was not dependent on the AChE inhibition, as the aging animals that learned the task still remembered the CS–US association even when the treatment with metrifonate was stopped and the AChE activity returned to J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 185 Fig. 8. Mean learning curves calculated for the three groups are expressed as the percentage of conditioned responses (CRs) per training session (M ± SEM). The 12- and 24-mg/kg groups demonstrated a significant increase in percent conditioned responses over the course of training when compared with the control group (p < 0.01). The 12- and 24-mg/kg groups continued to demonstrate significantly increased levels of eyeblink conditioning throughout retention testing after metrifonate treatment was discontinued. There were no significant changes in performance of any of the groups over the course of retention testing. The increased levels of eyeblink conditioning during training and retention testing were not due to generalized sensorimotor enhancement because there were no significant differences between the mean CR amplitudes, CR peak latencies, or unconditioned response amplitudes observed for the three groups during training and retention testing. Reprinted with permission from reference Kronforst-Collins et al. (1997b), Copyright 1997 by the American Psychological Association. Fig. 9. Bath application of metrifonate significantly decreased the accommodation and the post-burst AHP in CA1 neurons from aging subjects. An example of the effect of metrifonate on accommodation is illustrated in (A)–(C) (same neuron). (A) depicts a typical response elicited during the 800 ms depolarizing pulse obtained in baseline measures. (B) illustrates a typical increase in number of action potentials elicited during the accommodation pulse after the perfusate has been changed to 200 lM metrifonate. (C) depicts a typical decrease in the number of action potentials elicited after the perfusate has been changed to a combination of 200 lM metrifonate and 1 lM atropine, indicating that the metrifonate effect is muscarinic. An example of the AHP decrement observed after the perfusate has been changed to a 100 lM metrifonate in CA1 neurons from aging subjects is illustrated in (D) (scales for (B) and (C) are the same as that of (A)). Reprinted with permission from reference Oh et al. (1999b), Copyright 1999 by the Society for Neuroscience. basal levels (Kronforst-Collins et al., 1997b). This demonstrated that modulation of cholinergic transmission was essential for learning the task, but not for retrieval of the learned association. Interestingly, the level of steady-state AChE inhibition (40–60%) necessary for the amelioration of the age-related learning deficit was achieved after 3 weeks of metrifonate treatment (Kronforst-Collins et al., 1997a). This gradual buildup to the final, target range of ChE inhibition was found to be beneficial (Cummings et al., 1998; Morris et al., 1998; Pettigrew et al., 1998) and necessary for behavioral improvements in humans (Becker et al., 1991). Bath application of metrifonate dose-dependently reduced the AHP and accommodation of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons from both young and aging animals (Oh et al., 1999b). These reductions of the AHP and accommodation were effectively reversed by addition of a muscarinic receptor antagonist, atropine, to the perfusate; suggesting that the reductions of the AHP and accommodation involved modulation of muscarinic cholinergic transmission (Fig. 9). A key question that needed to be addressed was ‘could the biophysical state of CA1 neurons be altered after 3 weeks of metrifonate treatment that may have led to the behavioral amelioration of the learning deficit observed in aging rabbits?’ Thus, we treated aging rabbits with either metrifonate or saline for 3 weeks, after which the Fig. 10. Chronic, oral treatment with metrifonate (12 mg/kg daily) in aging subjects significantly reduced the accommodation in CA1 neurons. A typical example of the differing response to an 800 ms depolarizing current pulse used to obtain four action potentials in the first 100 ms observed in CA1 neurons from chronically metrifonate- (top) or vehicletreated (bottom) subjects. Reprinted with permission from reference Oh et al. (1999b), Copyright 1999 by the Society for Neuroscience. 186 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 biophysical properties of CA1 neurons from these animals were compared. We found that CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons from aging rabbits chronically treated with metrifonate had significantly reduced spike-frequency accommodation as compared to that from vehicle-treated rabbits (Fig. 10) (Oh et al., 1999b). Surprisingly, the accommodation of CA1 neurons from chronically metrifonate-treated aging rabbits was similar to that observed in neurons from naı¨ve, young rabbits. Thus, it appears that 3 weeks of metrifonate treatment produced a steady-state inhibition of cholinesterase activity which, among many things, altered the biophysical properties of CA1 pyramidal neuronal of the aging subjects to a ‘young’ like state. This change may have enabled these metrifonate treated aging animals to learn the trace eyeblink conditioning task like young animals. 4. CI-1017, a muscarinic receptor agonist CI-1017, an oxime of 1-azabicyclo[2.2.1] heptan-3-one with a 3-phenylpropargyl analogue substituent, is a muscarinic agonist designed to selectively activate the M1 receptor (Jaen et al., 1995; Tecle et al., 1998). The direct stimulation of the muscarinic receptor may be beneficial, because it does not depend on the presence of endogenous acetylcholine in the brain for action like the cholinesterase inhibitors. In addition, post-mortem examination of brains from Alzheimer’s disease patients revealed that muscarinic acetylcholine receptors appear to remain intact (Mash et al., 1985; Pearce and Potter, 1991), although they may not be all functional (Ferrari-DiLeo et al., 1995; Flynn et al., 1995). Animals given CI-1017 improved their performance on the Morris water maze task (Schwarz et al., 1997; Symons et al., 1988) and on a continuous performance task (Schwarz et al., 1997). In contrast, animals given the M1 antagonist pirenzepine were impaired on inhibitory avoidance (Caulfield et al., 1993), water maze (Hagan et al., 1987; Hunter and Roberts, 1988) and working memory (Ohno et al., 1994) tasks, and representational memory (Messer et al., 1987, 1990). Furthermore, a muscarinic receptor antagonist, scopolamine, impaired acquisition of the trace eyeblink conditioning task (Kaneko and Thompson, 1997). These data suggest that modulation of M1 receptors impacts learning and memory. Thus, we were interested in observing CI-1017’s effects on acquisition of trace eyeblink conditioning in aging rabbits and on biophysical properties of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons in vitro. CI-1017 ameliorated the learning deficit observed in aged rabbits (Weiss et al., 2000). It significantly increased the rate and amount of learning without any evidence of pseudoconditioning (Fig. 11) (Weiss et al., 2000). Thus, our data suggest that CI-1017 acts on associative sites to increase the probability of evoking a CR, and not on unconditioned reflex sites. CI-1017 also enhanced the excitability of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons from young and aging naive Fig. 11. CI1017 significantly facilitated learning the trace eyeblink conditioning task in aging rabbits. (A) A graph of the percent of trials with CRs across 15 daily training sessions as a function of drug dose. (B) The two higher doses (5 and 1 mg/ml) exhibited significantly more CRs than the two lower doses (0 and 0.5 mg/ml). Data are means ± SE. Error bars are omitted from (A) for clarity. Reprinted with permission from reference Weiss et al. (2000), Copyright 2000 by the Society for Neuroscience. rabbits; via reductions of the AHP and accommodation (Weiss et al., 2000). The AHP and accommodation reductions were reversed with addition of either atropine, a muscarinic receptor antagonist, or pirenzepine, a selective M1 muscarinic receptor antagonist, to the perfusate (Fig. 12). These results suggest that M1 agonists ameliorate agerelated learning and memory impairments at least in part by reducing the AHP and accommodation of hippocampal pyramidal neurons, and that M1 agonists may be an effective therapeutic compound for reducing the cognitive deficits that accompany normal aging and/or Alzheimer’s disease. 5. Galantamine, a cholinesterase inhibitor and an allosteric potentiating ligand Galantamine is a third generation cholinesterase inhibitor. Galantamine also potentiates the activity of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) and, thus, is called an allosteric potentiating ligand of nAChRs (Maelicke et al., 2001). Galantamine treatment reversed learning impairments observed after various insults to the brain: nucleus basalis magnocellularis lesion (Sweeney et al., 1988, 1990), ischaemia (Iliev et al., 2000), and ACh deficit due to prolonged alcohol treatment (Iliev et al., 1999). Galantamine treatment also facilitated the acquisition of the delay eyeblink conditioning task in aging rabbits (Woodruff-Pak et al., 2001). More importantly, Alzheimer’s disease patients treated with galantamine had their disease progression temporarily reversed and slowed as compared to placebo treated patients (Raskind et al., 2000; Tariot et al., 2000). J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 187 Fig. 13. Aged galantamine-administered (Aged/Gal) rabbits performed significantly more conditioned responses over the course of training compared with aged saline control (Aged/Veh) rabbits. Aged/Gal and young rabbits did not differ significantly on the final day of training. No significant difference was observed between young galantamine-administered (Young/Gal) and young saline control (Young/Veh) rabbits. Reprinted with permission from reference Weible et al. (2004), Copyright 2002 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Fig. 12. Typical examples of the effects of CI-1017 on biophysical properties from a single hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neuron from a young naive rabbit. An 800 ms pulse was used to examine accommodation after a burst of four action potentials. (A) Accommodation of the neuron in aCSF. (B) Accommodation is reduced by the addition of CI-1017, i.e., the cell is more excitable. (C) The excitability change due to CI-1017 is reversed by the addition of the muscarinic antagonist atropine. (D) Examples of the post-burst AHP during control (aCSF), drug (CI-1017), and reversal (CI-1017 plus atropine) conditions. Reprinted with permission from reference Weiss et al. (2000), Copyright 2000 by the Society for Neuroscience. We observed that galantamine ameliorated the agerelated learning impairment on the trace eyeblink conditioning task in rabbits (Fig. 13). Galantamine treated aged rabbits met the learning criteria of 8 CRs in a 10 trial block much quicker than the vehicle treated age-matched controls, requiring a similar number of trials as the young rabbits (Weible et al., 2004). Additionally, the properties and timing of the eyeblink response resembled those of young rabbits, which differed significantly as compared to agematched controls (Weible et al., 2004). These data suggest that the learning deficits associated with decreased cholinergic transmission in the aging brain is offset by enhancing nicotinic and muscarinic transmission with galantamine treatment. Preliminary findings from our laboratory demonstrate that the post-burst AHP and accommodation of CA1 pyramidal neurons from young and aging rabbits are reduced with bath application of galantamine (Oh et al., 2000). Atropine, a muscarinic agonist, significantly reversed these reductions; however, a nicotinic antagonist, a-bungarotoxin, had no effect. Additionally, galantamine significantly enhanced the excitatory post-synaptic potentials (EPSP) measured by Schaffer collateral stimulation. a-bungarotoxin blocked this EPSP enhancement, demonstrating that a7 nAChRs are involved in this allosteric potentiation. Several previous reports showed that nAChRs are involved in enhancing neurotransmitter release throughout the brain (Barazangi and Role, 2001; Dani, 2001; Lena et al., 1999; Wonnacott, 1997); specifically, that a7 nAChRs are involved in enhancing glutamate transmission in the hippocampus (Gray et al., 1996). Thus, the amelioration of learning deficit observed in aging subjects with galantamine treatment (Weible et al., 2004; Woodruff-Pak et al., 2001) may in part be due to the enhanced post-synaptic neuronal excitability via muscarinic receptor activation, as well as, the enhanced synaptic transmission via nicotinic receptor activation. 6. Knocking out BACE1 improves learning in the Tg2576 Alzheimer’s mouse model The b-amyloid (Ab) hypothesis of Alzheimer’s disease has recently driven the search for the cure of the disease (for review see Citron, 2004; Tanzi and Bertram, 2005). It has been suggested that soluble, rather than insoluble, Ab is the most important pathogenic factor in Alzheimer’s disease (Dodart et al., 2002; Selkoe, 2002; Walsh et al., 2002), as behavioral deficits precede Ab plaque formation in mice genetically engineered to overexpress the human form of 188 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 the disease (Dineley et al., 2002; Holcomb et al., 1999; Westerman et al., 2002). Within the past several years, the b-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) (Ohno et al., 2004) has become the primary therapeutic target candidate (Citron, 2004; Vassar et al., 1999). Thus, in collaboration with Robert Vassar and colleagues, we examined the potential rescue of behavioral deficits observed in Tg2576 animals by eliminating the function of BACE1 by knocking it out in these animals (Ohno et al., 2004). Deletion of BACE1 prevented the behavioral deficit observed in the Tg2576 animals (Ohno et al., 2004). The bigenic animals with BACE1"/" and Tg2576 (BACE Æ Tg2576) performed indistinguishably from their wild-type littermates in the hippocampus-dependent social recognition and spontaneous alteration Y-maze tasks; whereas, the Tg2576 animals were severely impaired (Fig. 14). The behavioral rescue was corroborated with ELISA assays that showed the levels of Ab were very similar between the wild-type littermates and the BACE Æ Tg2576 animals. Thus, we demonstrated for the first time that lowering Ab levels by inhibiting BACE1 is beneficial for AD-associated memory impairments mediated through the hippocampus. It has been suggested that Ab can inhibit cholinergic signal transduction independent of apparent neurotoxicity (Auld et al., 1998; Huang et al., 2000; Kelly et al., 1996; Zhong et al., 2003). Additionally, as reviewed above, the cholinergic agonist CI1017 has been demonstrated to facilitate learning and enhance neuronal excitability, via reduction of the AHP. Thus, we examined the biophysical properties of CA1 neurons from BACE Æ Tg2576 animals to cholinergic stimulation by bath applying carbachol, a cholinergic agonist. The capacity for post-synaptic plastic- Fig. 14. BACE1 Null Mutation Rescues Memory Deficits in the Tg2576 Alzheimer’s Model. Social recognition memory assessed with a 3 h intertrial delay (n = 10–20). The amount of investigation time during the second exposure to the same juvenile mouse divided by that of the initial investigation time · 100 (% investigation) was used as an index of social recognition memory. Note that only the Tg2576+ group does not show a reduction in spontaneous investigation to a familiar juvenile (approximately 100%) and thus is significantly impaired in this hippocampusdependent test. Each column represents the mean ± SEM. Significant differences from wild-type group (**p < 0.01) and Tg2576+ group (#p < 0.05), compared by ANOVA and post hoc Fisher’s PLSD test. Reprinted from reference Ohno et al. (2004), Copyright 2004, with permission from Elsevier. Fig. 15. BACE1 Null Mutation Rescues Hippocampal Cholinergic Dysfunction in the Tg2576 Alzheimer’s Model. (A) AHP in response to a 100 ms depolarizing current injection sufficient to elicit a burst of 7 action potentials was recorded from hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells. Representative traces show the post-burst AHP before (control) and after the application of 0.5 M carbachol (CCh). CCh at 0.5 M selectively inhibits the slow component of AHP (sAHP) without affecting the peak amplitude of AHP. Note that the effect of CCh on sAHP in Tg2576+ neurons is reduced as compared to hippocampal neurons from the other three groups. (B) Summary bar graphs showing CCh-induced reduction in sAHP measured by amplitudes at 1 s after pulse offset. The reduction of Tg2576+ sAHP values following CCh application is less than that of wildtype and BACE1"/" Æ Tg2576+. Each column represents the mean ± SEM of post-CCh sAHP expressed as % of control (pre-CCh) levels (n = 5–10). Significant differences from wild-type group (*p < 0.05) and Tg2576+ group (#p < 0.05), compared by ANOVA and post hoc Fisher’s PLSD test. Reprinted from reference Ohno et al. (2004), Copyright 2004, with permission from Elsevier. J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 ity evidenced by reduction of the AHP in CA1 pyramidal neurons was rescued in the BACE Æ Tg2576 animals. Carbachol significantly reduced the slow AHP in CA1 neurons from BACE Æ Tg2576 and wild-type litter mate animals as compared to those from Tg2576 animals (Fig. 15). Therefore, the behavioral rescue through BACE1 knockout in Tg2576 animals may be due in part to the restored capacity for post-synaptic neuronal excitability increases in hippocampal neurons via cholinergic modulation. We assume that such a process is an important component of the cellular changes that occur during learning in wild type animals. 7. Concluding statement The results from our work led us to formulate this working hypothesis: the enhanced excitability of hippocampal pyramidal neurons, via reductions in the slow AHP and accommodation, are important cellular changes that underlie hippocampus-dependent spatial and temporal learning. In support of this hypothesis, we have demonstrated that a transient, but not permanent, reduction of the AHP and accommodation is observed in hippocampal pyramidal neurons of animals that learned a hippocampusdependent task (Kuo et al., 2004; Moyer et al., 1996, 2000; Oh et al., 1999a, 2003; Thompson et al., 1996b). The postburst AHP in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons from aged animals is significantly enlarged as compared to that in neurons from young animals (Kumar and Foster, 2002; Landfield and Pitler, 1984; Moyer et al., 1992, 2000; Oh et al., 1999b; Potier et al., 1992; Power et al., 2002). Compounds that enhance excitability of CA1 neurons (by reducing the post-burst AHP and accommodation) ameliorate the learning impairment observed in normal aging animals. It is very interesting to note that chronic metrifonate treatment altered the biophysical properties of CA1 neurons from aging rabbits to that usually observed in neurons from young, untreated animals (Oh et al., 1999b). It is likely that alterations that we have observed in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons with the cholinergic compounds are also occurring in other pyramidal neurons throughout the neocortex. Furthermore, these compounds have been demonstrated to be beneficial in alleviating the cognitive deficits observed in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. The alteration of post-synaptic membrane properties (more specifically, the relationship between AHP and learning) is also being pursued in other laboratories. Reduction of the AHP in piriform cortical neurons has been demonstrated by Barkai and colleagues (Barkai and Saar, 2001; Saar et al., 1998). Recently, Tombaugh et al. (2005) elegantly demonstrated that there is a direct, inverse relationship in aged rats between the size of the post-burst AHP of CA1 neurons and performance on the water maze task. They found that aged animals with pyramidal neuron AHP amplitudes that are similar to that of neurons from young animals were able to learn the location of the hidden 189 platform; whereas, animals with significantly large pyramidal neurons slow AHPs were unable to learn the task. Thus, the post-burst AHP in hippocampal pyramidal neurons may be a cellular property that controls the capacity to learn a hippocampus-dependent task. In this abbreviated review, we discussed our experiences with pharmacological compounds and a genetic manipulation that ameliorate the learning deficit observed in normal aging and in a transgenic animal model of Alzheimer’s disease. A common denominator between normal aging and the transgenic AD model is the altered biophysical properties of hippocampal pyramidal neurons of these animals as compared to their respective counterparts (young and wildtype littermates). It remains to be seen if the rescue of transgenic animals with BACE knockout prevents the age-related enlargement of the post-burst AHP. The post-burst AHP is an indicator of cellular excitability. There are various neurotransmitter/neuromodulators that have been shown to alter it; in addition to numerous biochemical pathways (Storm, 1990; Wu et al., 2002). Understanding how the AHP is modulated by these pathways will help us come closer to understanding the cellular events that take place during learning. This may, in turn, help engineer future therapeutics to ameliorate the various learning deficits associated with normal aging and dementia. Acknowledgment This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Grant R37 AG08796 and R01 MH047340. References Auld, D.S., Kar, S., Quirion, R., 1998. Beta-amyloid peptides as direct cholinergic neuromodulators: a missing link? Trends Neurosci. 21, 43–49. Ban, T.A., Morey, L., Aguglia, E., Azzarelli, O., Balsano, F., Marigliano, V., Caglieris, N., Sterlicchio, M., Capurso, A., Tomasi, N.A., 1990. Nimodipine in the treatment of old age dementias. Prog. Neuropsychopharmacol. Biol. Psychiatry 14, 525–551. Barazangi, N., Role, L.W., 2001. Nicotine-induced enhancement of glutamatergic and gabaergic synaptic transmission in the mouse amygdala. J. Neurophysiol. 86, 463–474. Barkai, E., Saar, D., 2001. Cellular correlates of olfactory learning in the rat piriform cortex. Rev. Neurosci. 12, 111–120. Becker, R.E., Moriearty, P., Unni, L., 1991. The second generation of cholinesterase inhibitors: clinical and pharmacological effects. In: Becker, R.E., Giacobini, E. (Eds.), Cholinergic Basis for Alzheimer Therapy. Birkhauser, Boston, pp. 263–296. Berger, T.W., Thompson, R.F., 1977. Limbic system interrelations: functional division among hippocampal–septal connections. Science 197, 587–589. Berger, T.W., Thompson, R.F., 1978. Identification of pyramidal cells as the critical elements in hippocampal neuronal plasticity during learning. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 75, 1572–1576. Berger, T.W., Alger, B., Thompson, R.F., 1976. Neuronal substrate of classical conditioning in the hippocampus. Science 192, 483–485. 190 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 Brookmeyer, R., Gray, S., Kawas, C., 1998. Projections of Alzheimer’s disease in the United States and the public health impact of delaying disease onset. Am. J. Public Health 88, 1337–1342. Caulfield, M.P., Robbins, J., Higashida, H., Brown, D.A., 1993. Postsynaptic actions of acetylcholine: the coupling of muscarinic receptor subtypes to neuronal ion channels. Prog. Brain Res. 98, 293–301. Citron, M., 2004. Beta-secretase inhibition for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease—promise and challenge. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 25, 92–97. Coulter, D.A., Lo Turco, J.J., Kubota, M., Disterhoft, J.F., Moore, J.W., Alkon, D.L., 1989. Classical conditioning reduces amplitude and duration of calcium-dependent afterhyperpolarization in rabbit hippocampal pyramidal cells. J. Neurophysiol. 61, 971–981. Cummings, J.L., Cyrus, P.A., Bieber, F., Mas, J., Orazem, J., Gulanski, B., 1998. Metrifonate treatment of the cognitive deficits of Alzheimer’s disease. Metrifonate Study Group. Neurology 50, 1214–1221. Dachir, S., Schmidt, B., Levy, A., 1997. Effects of metrifonate on radial arm maze acquisition in middle-aged rats. Brain Res. 777, 251–254. Dani, J.A., 2001. Overview of nicotinic receptors and their roles in the central nervous system. Biol. Psychiatry 49, 166–174. Der Staay, F.J., Hinz, V.C., Schmidt, B.H., 1996. Effects of metrifonate on escape and avoidance learning in young and aged rats. Behav. Pharmacol. 7, 56–64. Deyo, R.A., Straube, K.T., Disterhoft, J.F., 1989. Nimodipine facilitates associative learning in aging rabbits. Science 243, 809–811. Dineley, K.T., Xia, X., Bui, D., Sweatt, J.D., Zheng, H., 2002. Accelerated plaque accumulation, associative learning deficits, and up-regulation of alpha 7 nicotinic receptor protein in transgenic mice co-expressing mutant human presenilin 1 and amyloid precursor proteins. J. Biol. Chem. 277, 22768–22780. Disterhoft, J.F., Coulter, D.A., Alkon, D.L., 1986. Conditioning-specific membrane changes of rabbit hippocampal neurons measured in vitro. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83, 2733–2737. Dodart, J.C., Bales, K.R., Gannon, K.S., Greene, S.J., DeMattos, R.B., Mathis, C., DeLong, C.A., Wu, S., Wu, X., Holtzman, D.M., Paul, S.M., 2002. Immunization reverses memory deficits without reducing brain Abeta burden in Alzheimer’s disease model. Nat. Neurosci. 5, 452–457. Ferrari-DiLeo, G., Mash, D.C., Flynn, D.D., 1995. Attenuation of muscarinic receptor-G-protein interaction in Alzheimer disease. Mol. Chem. Neuropathol. 24, 69–91. Flynn, D.D., Ferrari-DiLeo, G., Mash, D.C., Levey, A.I., 1995. Differential regulation of molecular subtypes of muscarinic receptors in Alzheimer’s disease. J. Neurochem. 64, 1888–1891. Gelmers, H.J., 1984. The effects of nimodipine on the clinical course of patients with acute ischemic stroke. Acta Neurol. Scand. 69, 232–239. Gray, R., Rajan, A.S., Radcliffe, K.A., Yakehiro, M., Dani, J.A., 1996. Hippocampal synaptic transmission enhanced by low concentrations of nicotine. Nature 383, 713–716. Hagan, J.J., Jansen, J.H., Broekkamp, C.L., 1987. Blockade of spatial learning by the M1 muscarinic antagonist pirenzepine. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 93, 470–476. Haws, C.W., Gourley, J.K., Heistad, D.D., 1983. Effects of nimodipine on cerebral blood flow. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 225, 24–28. Hebert, L.E., Scherr, P.A., Bienias, J.L., Bennett, D.A., Evans, D.A., 2003. Alzheimer disease in the US population: prevalence estimates using the 2000 census. Arch. Neurol. 60, 1119–1122. Holcomb, L.A., Gordon, M.N., Jantzen, P., Hsiao, K., Duff, K., Morgan, D., 1999. Behavioral changes in transgenic mice expressing both amyloid precursor protein and presenilin-1 mutations: lack of association with amyloid deposits. Behav. Genet. 29, 177–185. Horn, J., de Haan, R.J., Vermeulen, M., Luiten, P.G., Limburg, M., 2001. Nimodipine in animal model experiments of focal cerebral ischemia: a systematic review. Stroke 32, 2433–2438. Hotson, J.R., Prince, D.A., 1980. A calcium-activated hyperpolarization follows repetitive firing in hippocampal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 43, 409–419. Huang, H.M., Ou, H.C., Hsieh, S.J., 2000. Amyloid beta peptide impaired carbachol but not glutamate-mediated phosphoinositide pathways in cultured rat cortical neurons. Neurochem. Res. 25, 303–312. Hunter, A.J., Roberts, F.F., 1988. The effect of pirenzepine on spatial learning in the Morris Water Maze. Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. 30, 519–523. Iliev, A., Traykov, V., Prodanov, D., Mantchev, G., Yakimova, K., Krushkov, I., Boyadjieva, N., 1999. Effect of the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor galanthamine on learning and memory in prolonged alcohol intake rat model of acetylcholine deficit. Methods Find. Exp. Clin. Pharmacol. 21, 297–301. Iliev, A.I., Traykov, V.B., Mantchev, G.T., Stoykov, I., Prodanov, D., Yakimova, K.S., Krushkov, I.M., 2000. A post-ischaemic single administration of galanthamine, a cholinesterase inhibitor, improves learning ability in rats. J. Pharm. Pharmacol. 52, 1151– 1156. Itoh, A., Nitta, A., Katono, Y., Usui, M., Naruhashi, K., Iida, R., Hasegawa, T., Nabeshima, T., 1997. Effects of metrifonate on memory impairment and cholinergic dysfunction in rats. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 322, 11–19. Jaen, J., Barrett, S., Brann, M., Callahan, M., Davis, R., Doyle, P., Eubanks, D., Lauffer, D., Lauffer, L., Lipinski, W., 1995. In vitro and in vivo evaluation of the subtype-selective muscarinic agonist PD 151832. Life Sci. 56, 845–852. Kaneko, T., Thompson, R.F., 1997. Disruption of trace conditioning of the nictitating membrane response in rabbits by central cholinergic blockade. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 131, 161–166. Kelly, J.F., Furukawa, K., Barger, S.W., Rengen, M.R., Mark, R.J., Blanc, E.M., Roth, G.S., Mattson, M.P., 1996. Amyloid beta-peptide disrupts carbachol-induced muscarinic cholinergic signal transduction in cortical neurons. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 6753–6758. Knuttinen, M.G., Gamelli, A.E., Weiss, C., Power, J.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 2001a. Age-related effects on eyeblink conditioning in the F344 · BN F1 hybrid rat. Neurobiol. Aging 22, 1–8. Knuttinen, M.G., Power, J.M., Preston, A.R., Disterhoft, J.F., 2001b. Awareness in classical differential eyeblink conditioning in young and aging humans. Behav. Neurosci. 115, 747–757. Kronforst-Collins, M.A., Moriearty, P.L., Ralph, M., Becker, R.E., Schmidt, B., Thompson, L.T., Disterhoft, J.F., 1997a. Metrifonate treatment enhances acquisition of eyeblink conditioning in aging rabbits. Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. 56, 103–110. Kronforst-Collins, M.A., Moriearty, P.L., Schmidt, B., Disterhoft, J.F., 1997b. Metrifonate improves associative learning and retention in aging rabbits. Behav. Neurosci. 111, 1031–1040. Kumar, A., Foster, T.C., 2002. 17beta-estradiol benzoate decreases the AHP amplitude in CA1 pyramidal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 88, 621–626. Kuo, A.G., Lee, G., Disterhoft, J.F., 2004. Alteration of sIAHP underlies reduction of AHP in rat CA1 pyramidal neurons after trace eyeblink conditioning. 2004 Abstract Viewer/Itinerary Planner. Society for Neuroscience, Washington, DC, Program no. 741.13, Online. Lancaster, B., Adams, P.R., 1986. Calcium-dependent current generating the afterhyperpolarization of hippocampal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 55, 1268–1282. Landfield, P.W., Pitler, T.A., 1984. Prolonged Ca2+-dependent afterhyperpolarizations in hippocampal neurons of aged rats. Science 226, 1089–1092. Lena, C., de Kerchove, D.’E., Cordero-Erausquin, M., le Novere, N., Mar Arroyo-Jimenez, M., Changeux, J.P., 1999. Diversity and distribution of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the locus ceruleus neurons. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96, 12126–12131. Maelicke, A., Samochocki, M., Jostock, R., Fehrenbacher, A., Ludwig, J., Albuquerque, E.X., Zerlin, M., 2001. Allosteric sensitization of nicotinic receptors by galantamine, a new treatment strategy for Alzheimer’s disease. Biol. Psychiatry 49, 279–288. Mash, D.C., Flynn, D.D., Potter, L.T., 1985. Loss of M2 muscarine receptors in the cerebral cortex in Alzheimer’s disease and experimental cholinergic denervation. Science 228, 1115–1117. J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 McEchron, M.D., Disterhoft, J.F., 1997. Sequence of single neuron changes in CA1 hippocampus of rabbits during acquisition of trace eyeblink conditioned responses. J. Neurophysiol. 78, 1030–1044. McEchron, M.D., Disterhoft, J.F., 1999. Hippocampal encoding of nonspatial trace conditioning. Hippocampus 9, 385–396. McGlinchey-Berroth, R., Carrillo, M.C., Gabrieli, J.D., Brawn, C.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 1997. Impaired trace eyeblink conditioning in bilateral, medial–temporal lobe amnesia. Behav. Neurosci. 111, 873–882. Messer Jr., W.S., Thomas, G.J., Hoss, W., 1987. Selectivity of pirenzepine in the central nervous system. II. Differential effects of pirenzepine and scopolamine on performance of a representational memory task. Brain Res. 407, 37–45. Messer Jr., W.S., Bohnett, M., Stibbe, J., 1990. Evidence for a preferential involvement of M1 muscarinic receptors in representational memory. Neurosci. Lett. 116, 184–189. Morris, J.C., Cyrus, P.A., Orazem, J., Mas, J., Bieber, F., Ruzicka, B.B., Gulanski, B., 1998. Metrifonate benefits cognitive, behavioral, and global function in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Neurology 50, 1222–1230. Moyer, J.R., Disterhoft, J.F., 1994. Nimodipine decreases calcium action potentials in rabbit hippocampal CA1 neurons in an age-dependent and concentration-dependent manner. Hippocampus 4, 11–17. Moyer Jr., J.R., Deyo, R.A., Disterhoft, J.F., 1990. Hippocampectomy disrupts trace eye-blink conditioning in rabbits. Behav. Neurosci. 104, 243–252. Moyer, J.R., Thompson, L.T., Black, J.P., Disterhoft, J.F., 1992. Nimodipine increases excitability of rabbit CA1 pyramidal neurons in an age- and concentration-dependent manner. J. Neurophysiol. 68, 2100–2109. Moyer, J.R., Thompson, L.T., Disterhoft, J.F., 1996. Trace eyeblink conditioning increases CA1 excitability in a transient and learningspecific manner. J. Neurosci. 16, 5536–5546. Moyer Jr., J.R., Power, J.M., Thompson, L.T., Disterhoft, J.F., 2000. Increased excitability of aged rabbit CA1 neurons after trace eyeblink conditioning. J. Neurosci. 20, 5476–5482. Nordgren, I., Bergstrom, M., Holmstedt, B., Sandoz, M., 1978. Transformation and action of metrifonate. Arch. Toxicol. 41, 31–41. Oh, M.M., Gamelli, A.E., Knuttinen, M.G., Power, J.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 1999a. Enhanced neuronal excitability of CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons is observed after trace eyeblink conditioning in rats. Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 25, 84. Oh, M.M., Power, J.M., Thompson, L.T., Moriearty, P.L., Disterhoft, J.F., 1999b. Metrifonate increases neuronal excitability in CA1 pyramidal neurons from both young and aging rabbit hippocampus. J. Neurosci. 19, 1814–1823. Oh, M.M., Wu, W.W., Vogel, R.W., Woodruff-Pak, D.S., Disterhoft, J.F., 2000. Galanthamine enhances CA1 neuronal excitability and facilitates learning in young and aging rabbits. Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 6, 2014. Oh, M.M., Kuo, A.G., Wu, W.W., Sametsky, E.A., Disterhoft, J.F., 2003. Watermaze learning enhances excitability of CA1 pyramidal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 90, 2171–2179. Ohno, M., Yamamoto, T., Watanabe, S., 1994. Blockade of hippocampal M1 muscarinic receptors impairs working memory performance of rats. Brain Res. 650, 260–266. Ohno, M., Sametsky, E.A., Younkin, L.H., Oakley, H., Younkin, S.G., Citron, M., Vassar, R., Disterhoft, J.F., 2004. BACE1 deficiency rescues memory deficits and cholinergic dysfunction in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease. Neuron 41, 27–33. Pearce, B.D., Potter, L.T., 1991. Coupling of m1 muscarinic receptors to G protein in Alzheimer disease. Alzheimer Dis. Assoc. Disord. 5, 163– 172. Pettigrew, L.C., Bieber, F., Lettieri, J., Wermeling, D.P., Schmitt, F.A., Tikhtman, A.J., Ashford, J.W., Smith, C.D., Wekstein, D.R., Markesbery, W.R., Orazem, J., Ruzicka, B.B., Mas, J., Gulanski, B., 1998. Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and safety of metrifonate in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. J. Clin. Pharmacol. 38, 236–245. 191 Potier, B., Rascol, O., Jazat, F., Lamour, Y., Dutar, P., 1992. Alterations in the properties of hippocampal pyramidal neurons in the aged rat. Neuroscience 48, 793–806. Power, J.M., Wu, W.W., Sametsky, E., Oh, M.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 2002. Age-related enhancement of the slow outward calcium-activated potassium current in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons in vitro. J. Neurosci. 22, 7234–7243. Raskind, M.A., Peskind, E.R., Wessel, T., Yuan, W., 2000. Galantamine in AD: a 6-month randomized, placebo-controlled trial with a 6-month extension. The Galantamine USA-1 Study Group. Neurology 54, 2261–2268. Riekkinen Jr., P., Schmidt, B., Stefanski, R., Kuitunen, J., Riekkinen, M., 1996. Metrifonate improves spatial navigation and avoidance behavior in scopolamine-treated, medial septum-lesioned and aged rats. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 309, 121–130. Riekkinen, M., Schmidt, B.H., Riekkinen Jr., P., 1997. Subchronic treatment increases the duration of the cognitive enhancement induced by metrifonate. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 338, 105–110. Saar, D., Grossman, Y., Barkai, E., 1998. Reduced after-hyperpolarization in rat piriform cortex pyramidal neurons is associated with increased learning capability during operant conditioning. Eur. J. Neurosci. 10, 1518–1523. Schmidt, B.H., Hinz, V.C., van der Staay, F.J., 1998. The preclinical pharmacology of metrifonate, a long-acting and well tolerated cholinesterase inhibitor for Alzheimer therapy. In: Fisher, A., Yoshida, M., Hanin, I. (Eds.), Progress in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases. Plenum Press, New York, pp. 579–586. Schwartzkroin, P.A., Stafstrom, C.E., 1980. Effects of EGTA on the calcium-activated afterhyperpolarization in hippocampal CA3 pyramidal cells. Science 210, 1125–1126. Schwarz, R.D., Callahan, M.J., Davis, R.E., Jaen, J.C., Tecle, H., 1997. Development of M1 subtype selective muscarinic agonists for Alzheimer’s disease: translation of in vitro selectivity into in vivo efficacy. Drug Develop. Res. 40, 133–143. Selkoe, D.J., 2002. Alzheimer’s disease is a synaptic failure. Science 298, 789–791. Storm, J.F., 1990. Potassium currents in hippocampal pyramidal cells. Prog. Brain Res. 83, 161–187. Straube, K.T., Deyo, R.A., Moyer Jr., J.R., Disterhoft, J.F., 1990. Dietary nimodipine improves associative learning in aging rabbits. Neurobiol. Aging 11, 659–661. Sweeney, J.E., Hohmann, C.F., Moran, T.H., Coyle, J.T., 1988. A longacting cholinesterase inhibitor reverses spatial memory deficits in mice. Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. 31, 141–147. Sweeney, J.E., Bachman, E.S., Coyle, J.T., 1990. Effects of different doses of galanthamine, a long-acting acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, on memory in mice. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 102, 191–200. Symons, J.P., Davis, R.E., Marriott, J.G., 1988. Water-maze learning and effects of cholinergic drugs in mouse strains with high and low hippocampal pyramidal cell counts. Life Sci. 42, 375–383. Tanzi, R.E., Bertram, L., 2005. Twenty years of the Alzheimer’s disease amyloid hypothesis: a genetic perspective. Cell 120, 545–555. Tariot, P.N., Solomon, P.R., Morris, J.C., Kershaw, P., Lilienfeld, S., Ding, C., 2000. A 5-month, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of galantamine in AD. The Galantamine USA-10 Study Group. Neurology 54, 2269–2276. Tecle, H., Barrett, S.D., Lauffer, D.J., Augelli-Szafran, C., Brann, M.R., Callahan, M.J., Caprathe, B.W., Davis, R.E., Doyle, P.D., Eubanks, D., Lipiniski, W., Mirzadegan, T., Moos, W.H., Moreland, D.W., Nelson, C.B., Pavia, M.R., Raby, C., Schwarz, R.D., Spencer, C.J., Thomas, A.J., Jaen, J.C., 1998. Design and synthesis of m1-selective muscarinic agonists: (R)-(-)-(Z)-1-Azabicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-3-one, O(3-(3 0 -methoxyphenyl)-2-propynyl)oxime maleate (CI-1017), a functionally m1-selective muscarinic agonist. J. Med. Chem. 41, 2524–2536. Thompson, L.T., Deyo, R.A., Disterhoft, J.F., 1990. Nimodipine enhances spontaneous activity of hippocampal pyramidal neurons in aging rabbits at a dose that facilitates associative learning. Brain Res. 535, 119–130. 192 J.F. Disterhoft, M.M. Oh / Journal of Physiology - Paris 99 (2006) 180–192 Thompson, L.T., Moyer, J.R., Disterhoft, J.F., 1996a. Trace eyeblink conditioning in rabbits demonstrates heterogeneity of learning ability both between and within age groups. Neurobiol. Aging 17, 619– 629. Thompson, L.T., Moyer, J.R., Disterhoft, J.F., 1996b. Transient changes in excitability of rabbit CA3 neurons with a time course appropriate to support memory consolidation. J. Neurophysiol. 76, 1836–1849. Tollefson, G.D., 1990. Short-term effects of the calcium channel blocker nimodipine (Bay-e-9736) in the management of primary degenerative dementia. Biol. Psychiatry 27, 1133–1142. Tombaugh, G.C., Rowe, W.B., Rose, G.M., 2005. The slow afterhyperpolarization in hippocampal CA1 neurons covaries with spatial learning ability in aged Fisher 344 rats. J. Neurosci. 25, 2609– 2616. van den Kerckhoff, W., Drewes, L.R., 1989. Transfer of nimodipine and another calcium antagonist across the blood–brain barrier and their regional distribution in vivo. In: Bergener, W.B., Reisberg, B. (Eds.), Diagnosis and Treatment of Senile Dementia. Springer, New York, pp. 308–321. Vassar, R., Bennett, B.D., Babu-Khan, S., Kahn, S., Mendiaz, E.A., Denis, P., Teplow, D.B., Ross, S., Amarante, P., Loeloff, R., Luo, Y., Fisher, S., Fuller, J., Edenson, S., Lile, J., Jarosinski, M.A., Biere, A.L., Curran, E., Burgess, T., Louis, J.C., Collins, F., Treanor, J., Rogers, G., Citron, M., 1999. Beta-secretase cleavage of Alzheimer’s amyloid precursor protein by the transmembrane aspartic protease BACE. Science 286, 735–741. Walsh, D.M., Klyubin, I., Fadeeva, J.V., Cullen, W.K., Anwyl, R., Wolfe, M.S., Rowan, M.J., Selkoe, D.J., 2002. Naturally secreted oligomers of amyloid beta protein potently inhibit hippocampal long-term potentiation in vivo. Nature 416, 535–539. Weible, A.P., Oh, M.M., Lee, G., Disterhoft, J.F., 2004. Galantamine facilitates acquisition of hippocampus-dependent trace eyeblink conditioning in aged rabbits. Learn. Mem. 11, 108–115. Weiss, C., Kronforst-Collins, M.A., Disterhoft, J.F., 1996. Activity of hippocampal pyramidal neurons during trace eyeblink conditioning. Hippocampus, 192–209. Weiss, C., Bouwmeester, H., Power, J.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 1999. Hippocampal lesions prevent trace eyeblink conditioning in the freely moving rat. Behav. Brain Res. 99, 123–132. Weiss, C., Preston, A.R., Oh, M.M., Schwarz, R.D., Welty, D., Disterhoft, J.F., 2000. The M1 muscarinic agonist CI-1017 facilitates trace eyeblink conditioning in aging rabbits and increases the excitability of CA1 pyramidal neurons. J. Neurosci. 20, 783–790. Westerman, M.A., Cooper-Blacketer, D., Mariash, A., Kotilinek, L., Kawarabayashi, T., Younkin, L.H., Carlson, G.A., Younkin, S.G., Ashe, K.H., 2002. The relationship between Abeta and memory in the Tg2576 mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease. J. Neurosci. 22, 1858– 1867. Wonnacott, S., 1997. Presynaptic nicotinic ACh receptors. Trends Neurosci. 20, 92–98. Woodruff-Pak, D.S., Vogel, R.W., Wenk, G.L., 2001. Galantamine: effect on nicotinic receptor binding, acetylcholinesterase inhibition, and learning. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98, 2089–2094. Wu, W.W., Oh, M.M., Disterhoft, J.F., 2002. Age-related biophysical alterations of hippocampal pyramidal neurons: implications for learning and memory. Ageing Res. Rev. 1, 181–207. Zhong, P., Gu, Z., Wang, X., Jiang, H., Feng, J., Yan, Z., 2003. Impaired modulation of GABAergic transmission by muscarinic receptors in a mouse transgenic model of Alzheimer’s disease. J. Biol. Chem. 278, 26888–26896.