Preliminary study of ovariectomy and chronic losartan-induced alterations in brain AT receptors

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-1-2021

Publication Title

Brain Research

Keywords

AT(1) Receptor autoradiography, Angiotensin receptor blockers, Anxiety, Brain, Memory, Ovariectomy

ISSN

0006-8993

Volume

1766

First Page

147520

Abstract

Women who undergo oophorectomy prior to the age of natural menopause have a higher risk of neurological and psychological impairment. Treatment with the angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) losartan for 10 weeks following ovariectomy of Long-Evans rats at 3 months of age reduced the ovariectomy-induced cognitive decrements. Following completion of the behavioral experiments, (Campos et al., 2019), the brains were harvested for preliminary receptor autoradiographic studies of AT receptor (ATR) binding in selected brain regions using quantitative densitometric analysis of autoradiograms of I-sarcosine, isoleucine angiotensin II binding. Four of the brain regions (amygdala, ventral subiculum, piriform cortex, and cingulate cortex) are associated with cognitive and emotional behavior while one (lateral hypothalamus) is associated with homeostasis. The density of ATR varied by region: ventral subiculum > amygdala and cingulate cortex, and piriform cortex > cingulate cortex. Losartan treatment decreased ATR binding in the ventral subiculum of sham and ovariectomized rats by 41.6%, and 46% in the piriform cortex of the sham rats, but tended to increase ATR binding in the piriform cortex and cingulate cortex 77% and 107%, respectively, in the ovariectomized rats. ATR binding did not differ significantly between intact male and sham-vehicle female rats among surveyed brain regions. These results suggest that losartan-induced changes in brain ATR expression may contribute to the reduced anxiety-like behavior and memory impairments seen in ovariectomized rats, but replication of these observations will be needed to determine the extent to which brain ATR changes mediate the adverse behavioral effects of ovariectomy.

ORCID ID

0000-0003-0867-2322; 0000-0002-6434-2136

DOI

10.1016/j.brainres.2021.147520

Peer Reviewed

Find in your library

Share

COinS