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  2. The Effects of L-glucose on memory in mice are modulated by peripherally acting cholinergic drugs

The Effects of L-glucose on memory in mice are modulated by peripherally acting cholinergic drugs

  • Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2002 Jan;77(1):17-28. doi: 10.1006/nlme.2000.4001.
Catherine J Lawson 1 Judi Homewood Alan J Taylor
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, 2109 Australia.
Abstract

D-Glucose improves memory in Animals and humans and in subjects with memory pathologies. To date, the accepted conclusion drawn from animal research is that D-glucose improves memory via alterations in central cholinergic systems. However, recent evidence suggests that a sugar which does not cross the blood-brain barrier also facilitates memory (Talley, Arankowsky-Sandoval, McCarty, & Gold, 1999). The present study examined the effects of peripherally administered L-glucose, a stereoisomer of D-glucose, in male mice. Intraperitoneal administration of L-glucose (300 mg/kg) before testing enhanced place learning in the Morris water maze. Mice injected with L-glucose had significantly shorter escape latencies than mice injected with saline (1 ml/kg). Effects were observed on both reference memory and working memory tasks. L-Glucose did not facilitate performance on either task when it was simultaneously administered with cholinergic antagonists that are excluded from the central nervous system. Thus, simultaneous administration of either methyl-scopolamine (0.3 mg/kg), a peripherally acting muscarinic receptor blocker, or hexamethonium (1 mg/kg), a peripherally acting nicotinic receptor blocker, reversed the effect of L-glucose on memory. These findings suggest that the memory effects of l-glucose may be mediated by facilitated acetylcholine synthesis and/or release in the peripheral nervous system.

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