Validation of memory assessment in the Starmaze task: Data from 14 month-old APPPS1 mice and controls
Schmitt Julien,
Paradis Anne-Lise,
Boucher Mathieu,
Andrieu Laurent,
Barnéoud Pascal,
Rondi-Reig Laure
Affiliations
Schmitt Julien
CNRS, INSERM, Sorbonne Université,Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Neurosciences Paris Seine (NPS), Cerebellum Navigation and Memory Team (CeZaMe), Paris F-75005, France; Neurodegeneration Cluster, Rare & Neurologic Diseases Research, Sanofi R&D, Chilly-Mazarin F-91380, France
Paradis Anne-Lise
CNRS, INSERM, Sorbonne Université,Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Neurosciences Paris Seine (NPS), Cerebellum Navigation and Memory Team (CeZaMe), Paris F-75005, France
Boucher Mathieu
IT&M STATS, Neuilly sur Seine F-92200, France
Andrieu Laurent
Biostatistics & Programming Department, Non-Clinical Efficacy & Safety Team, Sanofi R&D, Vitry-Sur-Seine F-94400, France
Barnéoud Pascal
Neurodegeneration Cluster, Rare & Neurologic Diseases Research, Sanofi R&D, Chilly-Mazarin F-91380, France
Rondi-Reig Laure
CNRS, INSERM, Sorbonne Université,Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Neurosciences Paris Seine (NPS), Cerebellum Navigation and Memory Team (CeZaMe), Paris F-75005, France; Corresponding author.
This article describes navigation data of 14 month-old APPPS1 and C57Bl6 in the Starmaze task. These data were acquired as positive controls of memory deficit in a model of the familial form of Alzheimers's disease (see Schmitt et al., Flexibility as a marker of early cognitive decline in humanized Apolipoprotein E ε4 (ApoE4) mice, Neurobiol Aging, 2021). They were acquired in a reduced version of the Starmaze environment and accompanied by a number of acquisitions in different control groups at 6 and 14 months to assess the robustness of the procedure and its associated memory scores. These data illustrate the extraction of a variety of navigation scores (including search strategy, spatial learning and memory) and provide a reference of navigation data in the Starmaze task for healthy 6-month-old controls, normal aging and a model of pathological memory deficit.