Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals

<p><b>Background</b></p> Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) have been associated with preventing posttraumatic stress disorder symptom development and improving memory. However, the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. This study investigated ARB effects o...

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Main Authors: Shkreli, L, Thoroddsen, T, Kobelt, M, Martens, MAG, Browning, M, Harmer, CJ, Cowen, P, Reinecke, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023
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author Shkreli, L
Thoroddsen, T
Kobelt, M
Martens, MAG
Browning, M
Harmer, CJ
Cowen, P
Reinecke, A
author_facet Shkreli, L
Thoroddsen, T
Kobelt, M
Martens, MAG
Browning, M
Harmer, CJ
Cowen, P
Reinecke, A
author_sort Shkreli, L
collection OXFORD
description <p><b>Background</b></p> Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) have been associated with preventing posttraumatic stress disorder symptom development and improving memory. However, the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. This study investigated ARB effects on memory encoding and hippocampal functioning that have previously been implicated in posttraumatic stress disorder development. <p><b>Methods</b></p> In a double-blind randomized design, 40 high-trait-anxious participants (33 women) received the ARB losartan (50 mg) or placebo. At drug peak level, participants encoded images of animals and landscapes before undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging, where they viewed the encoded familiar images and unseen novel images to be memorized and classified as animals/landscapes. Memory recognition was assessed 1 hour after functional magnetic resonance imaging. To analyze neural effects, whole-brain analysis, hippocampus region-of-interest analysis, and exploratory multivariate pattern similarity analysis were employed. <p><b>Results</b></p> ARBs facilitated parahippocampal processing. In the whole-brain analysis, losartan enhanced brain activity for familiar images in the parahippocampal gyrus (PHC), anterior cingulate cortex, and caudate. For novel images, losartan enhanced brain activity in the PHC only. Pattern similarity analysis showed that losartan increased neural stability in the PHC when processing novel and familiar images. However, there were no drug effects on memory recognition or hippocampal activation. <p><b>Conclusions</b></p> Given that the hippocampus receives major input from the PHC, our findings suggest that ARBs may modulate higher-order visual processing through parahippocampal involvement, potentially preserving intact memory input. Future research needs to directly investigate whether this effect may underlie the preventive effects of ARBs in the development of posttraumatic stress disorder.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ada4918a-c3dc-4943-829f-ad776f89c1a12024-02-19T16:18:16ZAcute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individualsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ada4918a-c3dc-4943-829f-ad776f89c1a1EnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2023Shkreli, LThoroddsen, TKobelt, MMartens, MAGBrowning, MHarmer, CJCowen, PReinecke, A<p><b>Background</b></p> Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) have been associated with preventing posttraumatic stress disorder symptom development and improving memory. However, the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. This study investigated ARB effects on memory encoding and hippocampal functioning that have previously been implicated in posttraumatic stress disorder development. <p><b>Methods</b></p> In a double-blind randomized design, 40 high-trait-anxious participants (33 women) received the ARB losartan (50 mg) or placebo. At drug peak level, participants encoded images of animals and landscapes before undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging, where they viewed the encoded familiar images and unseen novel images to be memorized and classified as animals/landscapes. Memory recognition was assessed 1 hour after functional magnetic resonance imaging. To analyze neural effects, whole-brain analysis, hippocampus region-of-interest analysis, and exploratory multivariate pattern similarity analysis were employed. <p><b>Results</b></p> ARBs facilitated parahippocampal processing. In the whole-brain analysis, losartan enhanced brain activity for familiar images in the parahippocampal gyrus (PHC), anterior cingulate cortex, and caudate. For novel images, losartan enhanced brain activity in the PHC only. Pattern similarity analysis showed that losartan increased neural stability in the PHC when processing novel and familiar images. However, there were no drug effects on memory recognition or hippocampal activation. <p><b>Conclusions</b></p> Given that the hippocampus receives major input from the PHC, our findings suggest that ARBs may modulate higher-order visual processing through parahippocampal involvement, potentially preserving intact memory input. Future research needs to directly investigate whether this effect may underlie the preventive effects of ARBs in the development of posttraumatic stress disorder.
spellingShingle Shkreli, L
Thoroddsen, T
Kobelt, M
Martens, MAG
Browning, M
Harmer, CJ
Cowen, P
Reinecke, A
Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title_full Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title_fullStr Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title_full_unstemmed Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title_short Acute angiotensin II receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high-trait-anxious individuals
title_sort acute angiotensin ii receptor blockade facilitates parahippocampal processing during memory encoding in high trait anxious individuals
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