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Series GSE5666 Query DataSets for GSE5666
Status Public on Mar 15, 2007
Title Hippocampal pathways in cognitive impairment
Organism Rattus norvegicus
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Although immediate early genes (IEGs) such as Bdnf, Arc and Egr1, have been implicated in plasticity, the larger pathways related to memory and memory disorders are not well understood. Here, we combined statistical Affymetrix microarray and behavioral analyses to identify key genes and pathways associated with aging-related cognitive impairment. Aged rats were separated into cognitively unimpaired (AU) or impaired (AI) groups, based on their Morris water maze performance relative to young-adult (Y) animals. Hippocampal gene expression was assessed in Y, AU and AI on the fifth (last) day of maze training or 21 days posttraining, and in non-trained aged and young animals (eight groups, overall n = 78, one chip/animal). ANOVA, linear contrasts, and overrepresentation analyses identified genes and pathways that differed from Y generally with aging (in both AU and AI) or selectively with cognitive status (only in AI or AU). Plasticity pathways, including insulin/cAMP/IEG signaling, and glycogenolytic and lipogenic pathways, were selectively downregulated (5 days) in AI, whereas Notch2 (regulating oligodendrocyte differentiation) and myelination pathways were upregulated (particularly at 21 days). Downregulation with general aging occurred in signal transduction and axonal growth/transport pathways, whereas upegulation occurred in immune/inflammatory, lipid metabolism/transport (e.g., Lxr-Srebf1), and lysosomal pathways. In AU, receptor/signal transduction genes were selectively upregulated, suggesting possible compensatory mechanisms. Immunohistochemistry confirmed and extended results to the protein level. Thus, this study identified novel cognition-linked processes, suggesting a new model in which energy-intensive, plasticity/lipogenic processes and energy-generating pathways necessary for learning are coordinately downregulated during training, while myelinogenic programs that impair cognition are concurrently activated.
Keywords: Immediate Early Genes, Insulin Signaling, Cholesterol, Myelination, Glia, Inflammation, Young and Old comparaison, behavioral-characterization, Aging-related cognitive impairment.
 
Overall design Aged rats were separated into cognitively unimpaired (AU) or impaired (AI) groups, based on their Morris water maze performance relative to young-adult (Y) animals (NT, 5D, and 21D, N=10/group). Hippocampal gene expression was assessed in Y, AU and AI on the fifth (last) day of maze training or 21 days posttraining, and in non-trained aged and young animals (eight groups, overall n = 78, one chip/animal)
 
Contributor(s) Rowe WB, Blalock EM, Chen K, Kadish I, Wang D, Barrett J, Thibault O, Porter NM, Rose GM, Landfield PW
Citation(s) 17376971
Submission date Aug 29, 2006
Last update date Mar 03, 2017
Contact name Veronique Thibault
E-mail(s) vthibau@uky.edu
Organization name University of Kentucky
Department Pharmacology
Street address 800 Rose Street
City Lexington
State/province KY
ZIP/Postal code 40536
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL341 [RAE230A] Affymetrix Rat Expression 230A Array
Samples (78)
GSM132484 Kg12: Hippocampus_21PT-AU_rep1
GSM132485 Kg15: Hippocampus_21PT-AU_rep2
GSM132486 Kp6: Hippocampus_5T-Y_rep1
Relations
BioProject PRJNA96943

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE5666_Animal_ID_table.xls 32.5 Kb (ftp)(http) XLS
GSE5666_RAW.tar 201.9 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of CEL, EXP)

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