Abstract

Spatial memory deficits occur earlier in female than male rodents as the animals age, and the cessation of estrous cycle has been suggested to play a role in this phenomenon. We examined the effects of long-term ovariectomy (OVX) and estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) with subcutaneous 17β-estradiol minipellets on maze learning in aged (24-month-old) female C57BL/6J mice using a win-stay task (1/8 arms baited) in the radial arm maze (RAM) and a position discrimination task in the T-maze. ERT was started 40 days before the behavioral tests both in gonadally intact (sham-operated) and OVX mice. The effect of early OVX on RAM performance was investigated using three different age groups (7, 11 and 24 months) with different OVX durations (4, 8 and 19 months, respectively). ERT reduced the number of reference memory errors in RAM in aged sham-operated and OVX mice, but unlike in young mice ( Heikkinen et al., 2002) it had no effect on working memory errors. Furthermore, OVX impaired the performance of aged mice in the T-maze. Comparison across the three age groups and three OVX durations indicated that the memory impairment induced by an early age OVX attenuates as the mice get close to their estropausal age.

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