Life-long environmental enrichment differentially affects the mnemonic response to estrogen in young, middle-aged, and aged female mice.
about
Sex steroid hormones matter for learning and memory: estrogenic regulation of hippocampal function in male and female rodentsEpigenetics, oestradiol and hippocampal memory consolidationIntegrative Transcriptome Profiling of Cognitive Aging and Its Preservation through Ser/Thr Protein Phosphatase RegulationAPP intracellular domain-WAVE1 pathway reduces amyloid-β production.Role of Abca7 in mouse behaviours relevant to neurodegenerative diseases.Epigenetic alterations regulate estradiol-induced enhancement of memory consolidation.Estradiol-induced object memory consolidation in middle-aged female mice requires dorsal hippocampal extracellular signal-regulated kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activationA new approach to understanding the molecular mechanisms through which estrogens affect cognitionSpinal cord injury causes brain inflammation associated with cognitive and affective changes: role of cell cycle pathways.Acute estrogen treatment facilitates recognition memory consolidation and alters monoamine levels in memory-related brain areasHippocampal histone acetylation regulates object recognition and the estradiol-induced enhancement of object recognition.Environmental enrichment enhances episodic-like memory in association with a modified neuronal activation profile in adult mice.Estradiol alters Fos-immunoreactivity in the hippocampus and dorsal striatum during place and response learning in middle-aged but not young adult female ratsRegulation of object recognition and object placement by ovarian sex steroid hormones.Molecular mechanisms underlying the memory-enhancing effects of estradiol.Building a better hormone therapy? How understanding the rapid effects of sex steroid hormones could lead to new therapeutics for age-related memory decline.Comparing the predictive value of multiple cognitive, affective, and motor tasks after rodent traumatic brain injury.Estradiol-induced object recognition memory consolidation is dependent on activation of mTOR signaling in the dorsal hippocampus17β-Estradiol and Agonism of G-protein-Coupled Estrogen Receptor Enhance Hippocampal Memory via Different Cell-Signaling MechanismsProgesterone enhances performance of aged mice in cortical or hippocampal tasks.Post-training progesterone dose-dependently enhances object, but not spatial, memory consolidation.Estrogens and age-related memory decline in rodents: what have we learned and where do we go from here?Dose-dependent effects of post-training estradiol plus progesterone treatment on object memory consolidation and hippocampal extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation in young ovariectomized mice.Testosterone and dihydrotestosterone differentially improve cognition in aged female mice.Donepezil treatment restores the ability of estradiol to enhance cognitive performance in aged rats: evidence for the cholinergic basis of the critical period hypothesis.The epigenetics of estrogen: epigenetic regulation of hormone-induced memory enhancementEstrogens as neuroprotectants: Estrogenic actions in the context of cognitive aging and brain injury.Evaluating the Role of Hormone Therapy in Postmenopausal Women with Alzheimer's Disease.Environmental enrichment improves novel object recognition and enhances agonistic behavior in male mice.An enriched environment and 17-beta estradiol produce similar pro-cognitive effects on ovariectomized rats.The mTOR and canonical Wnt signaling pathways mediate the mnemonic effects of progesterone in the dorsal hippocampus.The influence of enriched environment on spatial memory in Swiss mice of different ages.
P2860
Q26796698-23802953-14E9-404E-8B34-D0FE554D66A9Q26823509-5CBB51AE-5759-42FB-9895-6928561AB303Q27303757-297F166A-67FC-427C-841F-D986E25EAFDEQ27315195-BBD2F8A1-2BE2-4AAF-86A7-2E4750F9C69BQ30463254-7B0D7BD3-9C9E-427E-9818-DC71045DE0F7Q33777778-426D3F09-F365-4BFC-8B16-7B941D7482A3Q33779918-462F8542-1A92-436C-BDF2-C6E9D44B9B63Q33925274-4420AF36-FBFA-434A-B146-2BC6F2CEB598Q34037588-F910B358-AFD7-4799-B4D3-7E8724B25D81Q34050191-78BB4788-9823-47B7-8AE5-0532D93B7EC7Q34259302-62EC1956-1510-468D-B04F-3334C4A100A6Q34460902-FEF45943-A268-4FDC-BF1C-FFE261024A18Q34578571-2A389F5F-AE44-439F-8ACB-8A6E3A68AEC9Q35085858-2BF5ED20-451F-4869-87BB-12E9F2958EFAQ36068695-D720EC35-E6B0-4584-9490-6FFE248E63D3Q36106017-79350EA5-F1C0-4DB9-93F6-58D2E0A05F0CQ36316770-135A1EB9-3664-4007-80AD-4E1B542C96C9Q36626391-EC519B97-21AF-4ED2-AFC8-5056BE185BFEQ36690146-EF8824BD-1671-4318-A2B3-17F29971426EQ36950095-5D43ED64-59E6-411E-B711-D384E1591116Q36972600-063FC7F9-BC29-4D76-9EBB-923EFF0316D4Q37147787-9E3B8EA1-A614-47B1-BBC5-0B6AAC3ACBA0Q37157784-749E470A-5E56-40A1-A942-FE696B11884EQ37303058-3EDD7030-1B0D-45FA-B26B-6DC9C42809E9Q37332321-0C70995A-3A62-49C4-81A0-A173A4B53CCFQ37713846-64CB4557-F4DB-4DD5-A7AF-7DCCD0146C8BQ38739583-538D8266-A987-4733-9EAC-E7F40CB5900DQ38814359-4B466117-DEFD-4375-9A95-87F19EB495A0Q39434739-A30CE75D-03F1-412B-89F0-EEF97702EE73Q40000516-241448F3-4690-4634-9F75-D7F4A532B193Q41719455-6CB86B2E-D600-468A-B1F6-A3B4F0E6B7DBQ50575271-C0FCDCC3-62F1-4163-B266-CAED7F40CD8C
P2860
Life-long environmental enrichment differentially affects the mnemonic response to estrogen in young, middle-aged, and aged female mice.
description
2007 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2007年の論文
@ja
2007年論文
@yue
2007年論文
@zh-hant
2007年論文
@zh-hk
2007年論文
@zh-mo
2007年論文
@zh-tw
2007年论文
@wuu
2007年论文
@zh
2007年论文
@zh-cn
name
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@ast
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@en
type
label
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@ast
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@en
prefLabel
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@ast
Life-long environmental enrich ...... le-aged, and aged female mice.
@en
P2860
P1476
Life-long environmental enrich ...... dle-aged, and aged female mice
@en
P2093
Jodi E Gresack
Kristin M Kerr
P2860
P304
P356
10.1016/J.NLM.2007.07.015
P577
2007-09-14T00:00:00Z