PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

R-Modafinil exerts weak effects on spatial memory acquisition and dentate gyrus synaptic plasticity.

  • Bharanidharan Shanmugasundaram,
  • Yogesh D Aher,
  • Jana Aradska,
  • Marija Ilic,
  • Daniel Daba Feyissa,
  • Predrag Kalaba,
  • Nilima Y Aher,
  • Vladimir Dragacevic,
  • Babak Saber Marouf,
  • Thierry Langer,
  • Harald H Sitte,
  • Harald Hoeger,
  • Gert Lubec,
  • Volker Korz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0179675
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. e0179675

Abstract

Read online

Modafinil is a wake promoting drug approved for clinical use and also has cognitive enhancing properties. Its enantiomer R-Modafinil (R-MO) is not well studied in regard to cognitive enhancing properties. Hence we studied its effect in a spatial memory paradigm and its possible effects on dentate gyrus long-term potentiation (DG-LTP). Clinically relevant doses of R-MO, vehicle dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or saline were administered for three days during the hole-board test and in in vivo DG-LTP. Synaptic levels of dopamine receptors D1R, D2R, dopamine transporter (DAT), and its phosphorylated form (ph-DAT) in DG tissue 4 h after LTP induction were quantified by western blot analysis. Monoamine reuptake and release assays were performed by using transfected HEK-293 cells. Possible neurotoxic side effects on general behaviour were also studied. R-MO at both doses significantly enhanced spatial reference memory during the last training session and during memory retrieval compared to DMSO vehicle but not when compared to saline treated rats. Similarly, R-MO rescues DG-LTP from impairing effects of DMSO. DMSO reduced memory performance and LTP magnitude when compared to saline treated groups. The synaptic DR1 levels in R-MO groups were significantly decreased compared to DMSO group but were comparable with saline treated animals. We found no effect of R-MO in neurotoxicity tests. Thus, our results support the notion that LTP-like synaptic plasticity processes could be one of the factors contributing to the cognitive enhancing effects of spatial memory traces. D1R may play an important regulatory role in these processes.