ePoster

THE MITOCHONDRIAL TARGETED ANTIOXIDANT MITOQ PREVENTS COGNITIVE DECLINE IN A NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDER MODEL IN RATS

Isabel Faulknerand 4 co-authors

The Univeristy of Manchester

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS03-08AM-280

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS03-08AM-280

Poster preview

THE MITOCHONDRIAL TARGETED ANTIOXIDANT MITOQ PREVENTS COGNITIVE DECLINE IN A NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDER MODEL IN RATS poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS03-08AM-280

Abstract

Cognitive deficits associated with schizophrenia have limited effective treatments. The aims of this study are to identify groups of typical and deficit rats following maternal immune activation in a memory-dependent task in offspring, and deliver a mitochondrial targeted antioxidant to investigate performance evaluating if these cognitive deficits can be ameliorated.
Pregnant Wistar rats (N=3-8) were given an i.p. injection of 10mg/Kg polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (poly(I:C)) or a saline vehicle on gestational day 15. Maternal tail vein blood (N=3-5) was taken 3-hours post injection, and the concentrations of plasma tumour necrosis factor ALPHA (TNF-ALPHA) and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) were measured using ELISA. Plasma cytokine differences were analysed by Wilcoxon rank sum and Welch’s 2-sample t-test respectively. Offspring (n=71) were tested at postnatal day ~100 in the novel object recognition (NOR) task and 2-step cluster analysis was performed based on the discrimination index (DI). Offspring were given either vehicle or MitoQ (3.394mg/Kg) via oral gavage for 7 days and immediately re-tested. Fully factorial linear regression for repeated measures was used to test the change in DI between baseline and post drug.
Maternal plasma TNF-ALPHA and MCP-1 were significantly increased in poly(I:C) treated dams (p=0.033, p=0.001). In the baseline offspring NOR task, cluster analysis revealed two clusters indicating typical and deficit rats. The typical cluster at baseline performed worse post-treatment with the vehicle drug, indicated by a DI change (p=0.003), whereas those treated with MitoQ did not exhibit such decline. This suggests that MitoQ may prevent memory decline.

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