Abstract

Studies using acute or subchronic pharmacological inhibition of phosphodiesterase 2 A (PDE2A) have led to its proposal as a target for treatment of cognitive deficits associated with neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative disease. However, the impact of continuous inhibition of PDE2A on memory is unknown. Moreover, the neuroanatomical regions mediating memory enhancement have not been categorically identified. To address these open questions, we studied knockout mice and hippocampus restricted manipulations. Pde2a heterozygous knockout mice are viable with no gross histological abnormalities. The mice exhibit enhanced spatial and object recognition memory that is independent of anxiolytic effects and is paralleled by increased density of dendritic mushroom and thin spines in hippocampal CA3 and dentate gyrus in adult mice. In CA1, subtle alterations in spine density were seen, while theta-burst LTP and paired-pulse facilitation were normal. Spatial memory enhancement persists in aged Pde2a heterozygous knockout mice, and to our surprise these mice live significantly longer than wild-type littermate controls. In summary, we provide evidence that life-long reduction of PDE2A expression promotes spine formation and maturation, exerts beneficial effects on memory, and increases lifespan.

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