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DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1263175
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Nocturnal Administration of Ghrelin does not Promote Memory Consolidation
Publication History
received 15.03.2010
revised 07.07.2010
accepted 21.07.2010
Publication Date:
14 September 2010 (online)
Introduction
Ghrelin is an endogenous ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor produced peripherally and centrally. A growing number of studies in mice and rats shows that administration of ghrelin improves several memory processes [3] [4] [5] [7]. However, also an impairment of memory retention in neonatal chicks after ghrelin administration has been reported [6]. In their recent paper, Atcha and colleagues [2] report that ghrelin receptor agonists enhance memory retention in rats. In line with other authors (e. g., [18]), they propose the central ghrelin receptor as a new drug target for therapeutic approaches to treat diseases affecting cognition.
Administration of ghrelin also interacts with sleep regulation. While ghrelin promotes non-rapid eye movement sleep in human males [11] [12] [21] and in mice [13], it suppresses sleep in rats [16] [17]. Sleep, on the other hand, has been shown to enhance nocturnal plasma ghrelin levels [10] and to play a crucial role in memory consolidation [15]. It is discussed to what extent several hormones might play a key role in this process [19]. Especially off-line gains in newly acquired sequential motor skills seem to be exclusively bound to sleep [15], a process in which the hippocampus has been shown to be involved [1]. Despite these reciprocal interactions between memory, ghrelin and sleep, no studies about the effects of ghrelin administration on sleep-associated memory consolidation exist so far. We therefore studied if nocturnal pulsatile ghrelin administration influences the consolidation of a motor learning task in humans.
References
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Correspondence
M. Dresler
Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry
Kraepelinstraße 2–10
80804 Munich
Germany
Phone: +49/89/30622 386
Fax: +49/89/30622 552
Email: dresler@mpipsykl.mpg.de