July 25, 2023

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MSK1's required role in cognitive benefits of enriched experiences in old age

Enrichment of aged mice improves hippocampus-dependent reference memory via MSK1. Credit: Aging (2023). DOI: 10.18632/aging.204833
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Enrichment of aged mice improves hippocampus-dependent reference memory via MSK1. Credit: Aging (2023). DOI: 10.18632/aging.204833

A new research paper titled "MSK1 is required for the beneficial synaptic and cognitive effects of enriched experience across the lifespan" has been published in Aging.

Positive experiences, such as , cognitive training and , have been shown to ameliorate some of the harms to cognition associated with aging. Animal models of positive interventions, commonly known as , strongly influence neuronal morphology and synaptic function and enhance cognitive performance. While the profound structural and functional benefits of enrichment have been appreciated for decades, little is known as to how the environment influences neurons to respond and adapt to these positive sensory experiences.

In this new study, researchers Lorenzo Morè, Lucia Privitera, Daniel D. Cooper, Marianthi Tsogka, J. Simon C. Arthur, and Bruno G. Frenguelli from the University of Warwick, University of Central Lancashire and University of Dundee show that adult and aged male wild-type mice that underwent a 10-week environmental enrichment protocol demonstrated improved performance in a variety of behavioral tasks, including those testing spatial working and spatial reference memory, and an enhancement in hippocampal long-term potentiation.

"Recently, a neuronal protein kinase, mitogen- and stress-activated protein kinase 1 (MSK1) has been identified as being a prime effector within the mammalian brain of the beneficial effects of enrichment in the early phase of the lifespan (birth to 4 months)," the researchers write.

Aged animals in particular benefited from enrichment, performing spatial memory tasks at levels similar to healthy adult mice. Many of these benefits, including in gene expression, were absent in mice with a mutation in an enzyme, MSK1, which is activated by BDNF, a growth factor implicated in rodent and human cognition. The researchers conclude that enrichment is beneficial across the lifespan and that MSK1 is required for the full extent of these experience-induced improvements of cognitive abilities, synaptic plasticity and .

In summary, they write, "We show that MSK1 retains its importance in converting positive experience into tangible synaptic and well into old age, reinforcing the aged brain's capacity to benefit from positive experience, MSK1's prominence as a key player in the response to enrichment, and its potential as a target for enviromimetics."

More information: Lorenzo Morè et al, MSK1 is required for the beneficial synaptic and cognitive effects of enriched experience across the lifespan, Aging (2023). DOI: 10.18632/aging.204833

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