: Nutritional status plays an important role in cognitive functioning but there is disagreement on the role that food deprivation plays in learning and memory. In this study, we investigated the behavioral and transcriptional effects induced by different lengths of food deprivation: 1 day, which is a short-time period of food deprivation, and 3 days, which is an 'intermediate' level of food deprivation. Snails were subjected to different feeding regimens and then trained for operant conditioning of aerial respiration where they received a single 0.5h training session followed by a long-term memory (LTM) test 24h later. Immediately after the memory test, snails were sacrificed and the expression levels of key genes for neuroplasticity, energy balance, and stress response were measured in the central ring ganglia. We found that 1 day of food deprivation was not sufficient to enhance snails' LTM formation and subsequently did not result in any significant transcriptional effects. However, 3 days of food deprivation resulted in enhanced LTM formation and caused the upregulation of neuroplasticity and stress-related genes and the downregulation of serotonin-related genes. These data provide further insight into how nutritional status and related molecular mechanisms impact cognitive function.

No food for thought: An intermediate level of food deprivation enhances memory in Lymnaea / Kagan, Diana; Rivi, Veronica; Benatti, Cristina; Tascedda, Fabio; Blom, Johanna M C; Lukowiak, Ken. - In: JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-0949. - 226:10(2023), pp. 1-15. [10.1242/jeb.245566]

No food for thought: An intermediate level of food deprivation enhances memory in Lymnaea

Rivi, Veronica;Benatti, Cristina;Tascedda, Fabio;Blom, Johanna M C;Lukowiak, Ken
2023

Abstract

: Nutritional status plays an important role in cognitive functioning but there is disagreement on the role that food deprivation plays in learning and memory. In this study, we investigated the behavioral and transcriptional effects induced by different lengths of food deprivation: 1 day, which is a short-time period of food deprivation, and 3 days, which is an 'intermediate' level of food deprivation. Snails were subjected to different feeding regimens and then trained for operant conditioning of aerial respiration where they received a single 0.5h training session followed by a long-term memory (LTM) test 24h later. Immediately after the memory test, snails were sacrificed and the expression levels of key genes for neuroplasticity, energy balance, and stress response were measured in the central ring ganglia. We found that 1 day of food deprivation was not sufficient to enhance snails' LTM formation and subsequently did not result in any significant transcriptional effects. However, 3 days of food deprivation resulted in enhanced LTM formation and caused the upregulation of neuroplasticity and stress-related genes and the downregulation of serotonin-related genes. These data provide further insight into how nutritional status and related molecular mechanisms impact cognitive function.
2023
226
10
1
15
No food for thought: An intermediate level of food deprivation enhances memory in Lymnaea / Kagan, Diana; Rivi, Veronica; Benatti, Cristina; Tascedda, Fabio; Blom, Johanna M C; Lukowiak, Ken. - In: JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-0949. - 226:10(2023), pp. 1-15. [10.1242/jeb.245566]
Kagan, Diana; Rivi, Veronica; Benatti, Cristina; Tascedda, Fabio; Blom, Johanna M C; Lukowiak, Ken
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1305011
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