AimIt is widely assumed that the upcoming therapeutics for Alzheimer’s disease will require to act on more than one target to be effective. We investigated here whether a combination of… Click to show full abstract
AimIt is widely assumed that the upcoming therapeutics for Alzheimer’s disease will require to act on more than one target to be effective. We investigated here whether a combination of the nicotinic receptor allosteric modulator/cholinesterase inhibitor galantamine can act synergistically with the type 4 serotonin receptor (5-HT4R) partial agonist, RS-67333, to counterbalance deficits in short- and long-term memory. To select sub-efficacious doses of both drugs, dose-response studies were first performed on the scopolamine-induced deficits of spontaneous alternation in the Y-maze task and of acquisition and retrieval processes in a passive avoidance task.ResultFor spontaneous alternation behavior, combination of 1 mg/kg galantamine and 0.5 mg/kg RS-67333 fully reversed the deficit. In the passive avoidance task, no sub-efficacious doses could be found in the retention paradigm, but a beneficial effect of the association has been demonstrated in the acquisition paradigm.ConclusionMnesic effects of galantamine can be thus potentiated by activation of 5-HT4R. Such a combination treatment might (1) strengthen symptomatic relief, (2) attenuate adverse effects given the lower doses of each compound required, and (3) afford a disease-modifying effect given the known action of 5-HT4R on amyloidogenesis cascade.
               
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