4.7 Article

The melatonin metabolite N1-acetyl-5-methoxykynuramine facilitates long-term object memory in young and aging mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF PINEAL RESEARCH
Volume 70, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpi.12703

Keywords

aging; long‐ term memory; melatonin; N1‐ acetly‐ 5‐ methoxykynuramine; N1‐ acetyl‐ N2‐ formyl‐ 5‐ methoxykynuramine; novel object recognition; short‐ term memory

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP18K11016]

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The study investigated the effects of melatonin and its metabolites on cognitive processes, with AMK showing stronger effects on object memory and the ability to improve age-related memory issues. Additionally, inhibiting the melatonin metabolic pathway disrupted object memory, highlighting the important role of AMK in long-term memory formation.
Melatonin (MEL) has been reported to enhance cognitive processes, making it a potential treatment for cognitive decline. However, the role of MEL's metabolites, N1-acetyl-N2-formyl-5-methoxykynuramine (AFMK) and N1-acetyl-5-methoxykynuramine (AMK), in these effects are unknown. The current study directly investigated the acute effects of systemic MEL, AFMK, and AMK on novel object recognition. We also analyzed MEL, AFMK, and AMK levels in hippocampus and temporal lobe containing the perirhinal cortex following systemic MEL and AMK treatment. AMK administered post-training had a more potent effect on object memory than MEL and AFMK. AMK was also able to rescue age-associated declines in memory impairments when object memory was tested up to 4 days following training. Results from administering AMK at varying times around the training trial and the metabolism time course in brain tissue suggest that AMK's memory-enhancing effects reflect memory consolidation. Furthermore, inhibiting the MEL-to-AMK metabolic pathway disrupted object memory at 24 hours post-training, suggesting that endogenous AMK might play an important role in long-term memory formation. This is the first study to report that AMK facilitates long-term object memory performance in mice, and that MEL crosses the blood-brain barrier and is immediately converted to AMK in brain tissue. Overall, these results support AMK as a potential therapeutic agent to improve or prevent memory decline.

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