Journal article
Modeling brain reserve: Experience-dependent neuronal plasticity in healthy and huntingtonĝ€™s disease transgenic mice
J Nithianantharajah, C Barkus, N Vijiaratnam, O Clement, AJ Hannan
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | Published : 2009
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:: Experience-dependent modification of neuronal and synaptic connectivity may represent a mechanism of relevance to the theory of brain or cognitive reserve. The authors have investigated structural correlates of synaptic function and plasticity, through analysis of dendritic morphology after environmental enrichment, a paradigm for investigation of experience-dependent plasticity. DESIGN:: Using a transgenic mouse model for Huntingtonĝ€ ™s disease (HD), R6/1 and wild-type mice were exposed to either standard housing or environmental enrichment from 4 until 20 weeks of age. MEASUREMENTS:: Golgi-stained neurons were analyzed for dendritic branching and spine density in the hippocamp..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors thank M. L. Howard for the PCR genotyping. This work was supported by Project Grants and an RD Wright award from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Lord Mayor's Charitable Fund (Eldon and Anne Foote Trust) and a Pfizer Australia Research Fellowship (to AJH).