[Protective effect of selank on the model of mnestic function violation induced by pharmacological blockade of protein synthesis].
Kozlovskiĭ. I I II; Belozertsev. F Iu FIu; Andreeva. L A LA; Kozlovskaia. M M MM
Key Findings
- Selank (0.5â¯mg/kg, i.p.) prevented memory loss caused by actinomycinâ¯D (250â¯mg/kg, i.p.) in rats
- It shortened the time needed for rats to acquire spatial orientation in a 16âdoor maze
- Selank restored the ability to relearn after the mazeâs escape pattern was altered
Practical Outcomes
- The results hint that selank could support memory formation under conditions that impair protein synthesis, but the study is limited to rats and uses a toxic blocker not relevant to everyday life. For biohackers, it suggests a possible nootropic benefit, yet no human dosing or safety data exist, so any use would be experimental and should await further research.
Summary
In a rat study, the peptide selank helped protect memory and learning when the animals were given a drug that blocks protein production, which normally messes up their ability to learn a maze. Selank reduced the time it took the rats to learn and helped them relearn when the maze changed, showing a protective effect on memory processes.
Abstract
We have studied the ability of peptide anxiolytic selank (Thr-Lyz-Pro-Arg-Pro-Gly-Pro) to compensate for mnestic dysfunction caused by the administration of actinomycin D, which inhibits protein synthesis by blocking DNA-dependent RNA polymerase. The experiments were performed on white rats with acquired adaptive ability of spatial visual orientation in a 16-door labyrinth. The learning was based on the avoidance of electric skin irritation at alternating sites of escape reaction (site reflex). Selank (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) prevented or compensated for actinomycin D (250 mg/kg, i.p.) induced violation of the process of acquisition, improvement, and consolidation of memory trace during the development of a complex site reflex. The drug administration also reduced the time required for acquisition of the adaptive ability of spatial visual orientation in the labyrinth and restored the actinomycin D violated process of re-learning upon a change in the alternation of escape sites under free-choice conditions.
Study Information
pubmed
2013