Prenatal fluoxetine impairs non-hippocampal but not hippocampal memory in adult male rat offspring

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Moraga-Amaro, Rodrigo
Díaz-Galarce, Raul
Donoso-Ramos, Juan P.
Ugalde, Valentina
Linsambarth, Sergio
Doorduin, Janine
de Vries, Erik FJ
Ampuero, Estibaliz
Peña, Francisca
Pacheco, Rodrigo
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<p>Fluoxetine is often prescribed to treat depression during pregnancy. Rodent studies have shown that fluoxetine exposure during early development can induce persistent changes in the emotional behavior of the offspring. However, the effects of prenatal fluoxetine on memory have not been elucidated. This study evaluates the memory of adult male offspring from rat dams orally administered with a clinically relevant dose of 0.7 mg/kg fluoxetine from 9 weeks before pregnancy to 1 week before delivery. Hippocampal-dependent (Morris Water Maze, MWM) and non-hippocampal-dependent (Novel Object Recognition, NOR) memory paradigms were assessed. Anxiety- and depressive-like symptoms were also evaluated using the Open Field Test, Tail Suspension Test and Sucrose Preference Test. Male rats exposed to fluoxetine during gestation displayed NOR memory impairments during adulthood, as well as increased anxiety- and depressive-like symptoms. In the MWM, the offspring of fluoxetine-treated dams did not show learning deficits. However, a retention impairment was found on remote memory, 15 days after the end of training. Molecular analyses showed increased expression of NMDA subunit NR<sub>2B</sub>, and a decrease in NR<sub>2A</sub>-to- NR<sub>2B</sub> ratio in the temporal cortex, but not in the hippocampus, suggesting changes in NMDA receptor composition. These results suggest that in utero exposure to fluoxetine induces detrimental effects on non-hippocampal memory and in remote retention of hippocampal-dependent memory, which is believed to be stored in the temporal cortex, possibly due to changes in cortical NMDA receptor subunit stoichiometry. The present results warrant the need for studies on potential remote memory deficits in human offspring exposed to fluoxetine in utero.</p>
Keywords
Fluoxetine, In utero, Memory impairment, NR, Offspring, Pregnancy, Remote memory, Retention deficit, Temporal cortex
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