Associations Between Nesting, Stereotypy, And Working Memory In Deer Mice: Response To Levetiracetam

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Date
2023Author
Hurter, Bianca
Gourley, Shannon L.
Wolmarans, De Wet
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Background Some deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii) exhibit various phenotypes of persistent behaviors. It remains
unknown if and how said phenotypes associate with early-life and adult cognitive perturbations, and whether potentially
cognitive enhancing drugs might modify such associations. Here, we explored the longitudinal relationship between earlylife behavioral fexibility and the expression of persistent behavior in adulthood. We also investigated how said phenotypes
might associate with working memory in adulthood, and how this association might respond to chronic exposure to the
putative cognitive enhancer, levetiracetam (LEV).
Methods 76 juvenile deer mice were assessed for habit-proneness in the Barnes maze (BM) and divided into two exposure
groups (n=37–39 per group), i.e., control and LEV (75 mg/kg/day). After 56 days of uninterrupted exposure, mice were
screened for nesting and stereotypical behavior, and then assessed for working memory in the T-maze.
Results Juvenile deer mice overwhelmingly utilize habit-like response strategies, regardless of LNB and HS behavior in
adulthood. Further, LNB and HS are unrelated in terms of their expression, while LEV reduces the expression of LNB, but
bolsters CR (but not VA). Last, an increased level of control over high stereotypical expression may facilitate improved
working memory performance.
Conclusion LNB, VA and CR, are divergent in terms of their neurocognitive underpinnings. Chronic LEV administration
throughout the entire rearing period may be of beneft to some phenotypes, e.g., LNB, but not others (CR). We also show
that an increased level of control over the expression of stereotypy may facilitate improved working memory performance
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- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]