Abstract

BackgroundExecutive functions, learning and attention are imperative facets of cognitive performance, affected in many neuropsychiatric disorders. Recently, we have shown that recombinant human erythropoietin improves cognitive functions in patients with chronic schizophrenia, and that it leads in healthy mice to enhanced hippocampal long-term potentiation, an electrophysiological correlate of learning and memory. To create an experimental basis for further mechanistic insight into erythropoietin-modulated cognitive processes, we employed the Five Choice Serial Reaction Time Task. This procedure allows the study of the effects of erythropoietin on discrete processes of learning and attention in a sequential fashion.ResultsMale mice were treated for 3 weeks with erythropoietin (5,000 IU/kg) versus placebo intraperitoneally every other day, beginning at postnatal day 28. After termination of treatment, mice were started on the Five Choice Serial Reaction Time Task, with daily training and testing extending to about 3 months.Overall, a significantly higher proportion of erythropoietin-treated mice finished the task, that is, reached the criteria of adequately reacting to a 1.0 sec flash light out of five arbitrarily appearing choices. During acquisition of this capability, that is, over almost all sequential training phases, learning readouts (magazine training, operant and discriminant learning, stability of performance) were superior in erythropoietin-treated versus control mice.ConclusionEarly erythropoietin treatment leads to lasting improvement of cognitive performance in healthy mice. This finding should be exploited in novel treatment strategies for brain diseases.

Highlights

  • Executive functions, learning and attention are imperative facets of cognitive performance, affected in many neuropsychiatric disorders

  • Early erythropoietin treatment leads to lasting improvement of cognitive performance in healthy mice

  • Upon introduction of EPO to the clinic, it was observed that cognitive performance of treated individuals improved

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Summary

Introduction

Executive functions, learning and attention are imperative facets of cognitive performance, affected in many neuropsychiatric disorders. To create an experimental basis for further mechanistic insight into erythropoietin-modulated cognitive processes, we employed the Five Choice Serial Reaction Time Task. This procedure allows the study of the effects of erythropoietin on discrete processes of learning and attention in a sequential fashion. Upon introduction of EPO to the clinic, it was observed that cognitive performance of treated individuals improved. This improvement was essentially attributed to anaemia correction with subsequently enhanced tissue oxygenation in the brain [1]. The separation of haematopoietic and neuroprotective properties upon slight modification of the EPO molecule proved the haematopoiesis-independent effect of EPO on the nervous system [6]

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