iScience (Oct 2020)

Hippocampal 7α-Hydroxylated Neurosteroids Are Raised by Training and Bolster Remote Spatial Memory with Increase of the Spine Densities

  • Kanako Maehata,
  • Kimiko Shimizu,
  • Tomoko Ikeno,
  • Qiuyi Wang,
  • Ayaka Sakurai,
  • Zefeng Wei,
  • Yue Pan,
  • Toshifumi Takao,
  • Yoshitaka Fukada

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 10
p. 101559

Abstract

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Summary: Neuroactive steroids, termed neurosteroids, are synthesized locally in the brain and influence biological functions including cognition and behavior. These neurosteroids are synthesized from cholesterol by a series of cytochrome P450 enzymes, among which a member of P450 hydroxylase, cytochrome P450-7b1 (CYP7B1), catalyzes the formation of 7α-hydroxylated neurosteroids, 7α-hydroxypregnenolone (7α-OH-Preg) and 7α-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone (7α-OH-DHEA). Here we demonstrated the occurrence of these neurosteroids in the mouse hippocampus after spatial-learning tasks. Cyp7b1 deficiency impaired remote spatial memory with recent memory mostly unaffected. The hippocampal dendritic spine densities were reduced in Cyp7b1-deficient mice, and they were no more increased by the training. Furthermore, chronic intracerebroventricular administration of a mixture of 7α-OH-Preg and 7α-OH-DHEA rescued the deteriorated remote memory performance in Cyp7b1-deficient mice. It is concluded that the 7α-hydroxylated neurosteroids are required for long-term maintenance of spatial memory, and we suggest that these neurosteroids may induce synaptic remodeling to maintain the hippocampal function.

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