Journal
BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/brb3.674
Keywords
5-HT4 receptor; affective words; latent variable model; negative biases; positron emission tomography
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Funding
- Lundbeck Foundation [R83-A7041]
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BackgroundWe have previously identified an inverse relationship between cerebral serotonin 4 receptor (5-HT4R) binding and nonaffective episodic memory in healthy individuals. Here, we investigate in a novel sample if the association is related to affective components of memory, by examining the association between cerebral 5-HT4R binding and affective verbal memory recall. MethodsTwenty-four healthy volunteers were scanned with the 5-HT4R radioligand [C-11]SB207145 and positron emission tomography, and were tested with the Verbal Affective Memory Test-24. The association between 5-HT4R binding and affective verbal memory was evaluated using a linear latent variable structural equation model. ResultsWe observed a significant inverse association across all regions between 5-HT4R binding and affective verbal memory performances for positive (p=5.5x10(-4)) and neutral (p=.004) word recall, and an inverse but nonsignificant association for negative (p=.07) word recall. Differences in the associations with 5-HT4R binding between word categories (i.e., positive, negative, and neutral) did not reach statistical significance. ConclusionOur findings replicate our previous observation of a negative association between 5-HT4R binding and memory performance in an independent cohort and provide novel evidence linking 5-HT4R binding, as a biomarker for synaptic 5-HT levels, to the mnestic processing of positive and neutral word stimuli in healthy humans.
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