ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME-INHIBITION, ANGIOTENSIN, AND COGNITION

被引:59
作者
BARNES, JM
BARNES, NM
COSTALL, B
COUGHLAN, J
KELLY, ME
NAYLOR, RJ
TOMKINS, DM
WILLIAMS, TJ
机构
关键词
ACE; ACE INHIBITORS; COGNITION; SCOPOLAMINE; CATECHOLAMINES; ACETYLCHOLINE;
D O I
10.1097/00005344-199219006-00011
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
In these studies, we have investigated possible cognition-enhancing effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition, and putative neurochemical correlates for these actions. In a mouse habituation model, ACE inhibitors improved basal performance and antagonized scopolamine-induced deficits. The performance of aged mice and those with lesions of the nucleus basalis was also improved. ACE inhibition also improved scopolamine-impaired performance of rats in a swim-maze model. Neurochemical studies showed that a low dose (10-mu-g/kg i.p.) of ceranapril caused significant alterations in ex vivo rat brain catecholamine levels in the nucleus accumbens, amygdala, and septum. In further studies, angiotensin II (Ang II) was shown to decrease potassium-stimulated [H-3] acetylcholine release from slices of rat entorhinal and human temporal cortex, an effect that could be antagonized by the angiotensin receptor antagonist [1-sar,8-thr]Ang II. It is concluded that ACE inhibition can improve both basal and impaired performance in animal models of learning, and that this improvement may be in part a consequence of the removal by ACE inhibition of an inhibitory tone on central acetylcholine release, and/or an effect on central catecholaminergic function.
引用
收藏
页码:S63 / S71
页数:9
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME IN ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE - INCREASED ACTIVITY IN CAUDATE-NUCLEUS AND CORTICAL AREAS [J].
ARREGUI, A ;
PERRY, EK ;
ROSSOR, M ;
TOMLINSON, BE .
JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 1982, 38 (05) :1490-1492
[2]   ANGIOTENSIN-II INHIBITS THE RELEASE OF [H-3]ACETYLCHOLINE FROM RAT ENTORHINAL CORTEX INVITRO [J].
BARNES, JM ;
BARNES, NM ;
COSTALL, B ;
HOROVITZ, ZP ;
NAYLOR, RJ .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1989, 491 (01) :136-143
[3]   ANGIOTENSIN-II INHIBITS ACETYLCHOLINE-RELEASE FROM HUMAN TEMPORAL CORTEX - IMPLICATIONS FOR COGNITION [J].
BARNES, JM ;
BARNES, NM ;
COSTALL, B ;
HOROVITZ, ZP ;
IRONSIDE, JW ;
NAYLOR, RJ ;
WILLIAMS, TJ .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1990, 507 (02) :341-343
[4]  
BARNES JM, 1989, THESIS BRADFORD U
[5]  
Barnes N M, 1990, Neuroreport, V1, P239, DOI 10.1097/00001756-199011000-00017
[6]   THE CHOLINERGIC HYPOTHESIS OF GERIATRIC MEMORY DYSFUNCTION [J].
BARTUS, RT ;
DEAN, RL ;
BEER, B ;
LIPPA, AS .
SCIENCE, 1982, 217 (4558) :408-417
[7]   CO-IDENTITY OF BRAIN ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME WITH A MEMBRANE-BOUND DIPEPTIDYL CARBOXYPEPTIDASE INACTIVATING MET - ENKEPHALIN [J].
BENUCK, M ;
MARKS, N .
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 1979, 88 (01) :215-221
[8]   AGING AND BRAIN CHOLINERGIC MUSCARINIC RECEPTORS - AN AUTORADIOGRAPHIC STUDY IN THE RAT [J].
BIEGON, A ;
DUVDEVANI, R ;
GREENBERGER, V ;
SEGAL, M .
JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 1988, 51 (05) :1381-1385
[9]   EFFECT OF ANGIOTENSIN-II AND SARALASIN ON MOTOR-ACTIVITY AND THE PASSIVE-AVOIDANCE BEHAVIOR OF RATS [J].
BRASZKO, JJ ;
WISNIEWSKI, K .
PEPTIDES, 1988, 9 (03) :475-479
[10]  
CAMPBELL WB, 1979, AM J PHYSIOL, V269, pH211