Memory-enhancing effects in male mice of pregnenolone and steroids metabolically derived from it.

Abstract
Immediate post-training intracerebroventricular administration to male mice of pregnenolone (P), pregnenolone sulfate (PS), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), androstenedione, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, or aldosterone caused improvement of retention for footshock active avoidance training, while estrone, estradiol, progesterone, or 16 beta-bromoepiandrosterone did not. Dose-response curves were obtained for P, PS, DHEA, and testosterone. P and PS were the most potent, PS showing significant effects at 3.5 fmol per mouse. The active steroids did not show discernible structural features or known membrane or biochemical effects that correlated with their memory-enhancing capacity. The above, together with the findings that DHEA acted even when given at 1 hr after training and that P, PS, and DHEA improved retention over a much wider dose range than do excitatory memory enhancers, led to the suggestion that the effects of the active steroids converge at the facilitation of transcription of immediate-early genes. P and PS, for which receptors have not yet been demonstrated, may exert their effects by serving as precursors for the formation of a panoply of different steroids, ensuring near-optimal modulation of transcription of immediate-early genes required for achieving the plastic changes of memory processes. Low serum levels of P in aging and the increases of cancer and behavioral disorders in individuals receiving drugs that block synthesis of cholesterol, the immediate precursor of P, suggest possible clinical utility for P.