Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jan 2011)

Neuroprotective Effects of Citidine-5-diphosphocholine on Impaired Spatial Memory in a Rat Model of Cerebrovascular Dementia

  • Kotaro Takasaki,
  • Kanako Uchida,
  • Risako Fujikawa,
  • Ai Nogami,
  • Kazuya Nakamura,
  • Chihiro Kawasaki,
  • Kazuko Yamaguchi,
  • Masahiko Morita,
  • Koji Morishita,
  • Kaori Kubota,
  • Shutaro Katsurabayashi,
  • Kenichi Mishima,
  • Michihiro Fujiwara,
  • Katsunori Iwasaki

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 116, no. 3
pp. 232 – 237

Abstract

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Abstract.: Citidine-5-diphosphocholine or citicoline (CDP-choline) is used as a neuroprotective and memory-enhancing drug in cerebral stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, and other neurovascular diseases. Non-clinical studies have demonstrated the neuroprotective effects of CDP-choline in ischemic animal models. However, the relationship between the neuroprotective effect and the memory enhancing effect of CDP-choline is still unknown. No studies have demonstrated the ameliorative effect on impaired spatial memory and the suppressive effect on neuronal cell death of CDP-choline in the same model. In this study, we examined the effect of CDP-choline on impaired spatial memory and hippocampal CA1 neuronal death in rats subjected to repeated cerebral ischemia, and we compared the mechanism of CDP-choline to that of donepezil. Seven days post administration of CDP-choline (100, 300, 1000 mg/kg per day, p.o.) or donepezil increased correct choices and reduced error choices in an eight-arm radial maze task in a dose-dependent manner. Neuronal cell death of caspase-3 protein–positive neurons in the hippocampus were reduced by repeated administration of CDP-choline at the highest dose. These results suggest that CDP-choline has ameliorative effects on the impairment of spatial memory via hippocampal neuronal cell death in a rat model of cerebral ischemia. Keywords:: citidine-5-diphosphocholine (CDP-choline), spatial memory, repeated ischemia, apoptosis