Short-Term New Zealand ‘Blackadder’ Blackcurrant Juice Supplementation Improves Learning and Memory in Young Adult Rats

Dominic Lomiwes*, Alexander P. Kanon, Birgit Ha, Janine M. Cooney, Andrew Scholey, Kirsty A. Lyall, Dwayne J. Jensen, Roger D. Hurst

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Berryfruit consumption has been shown to improve aspects of cognition in humans, and may protect against age-related cognitive decline via antioxidant mechanisms. This study investigated whether short-term supplementation with New Zealand ‘Blackadder’ blackcurrant (BC) juice supports spatial learning and memory in healthy young adult Sprague Dawley rats. Male rats (n = 24) received BC juice (n = 12; 5.4 mg/kg polyphenols) or a sugar-matched placebo (n = 12) prior to each daily trial during a four-day Morris Water Maze (MWM) acquisition phase and a probe trial on day five. BC supplementation significantly reduced cumulative distance (p = 0.020) and latency (p = 0.030) to the platform. In the probe trial, the trends showed that BC-supplemented rats spent more time in the platform zone. These improvements corresponded with detectable plasma anthocyanins, and trends toward higher hippocampal superoxide dismutase activity (p = 0.028, pa = 0.140) and lower circulating corticosterone (p = 0.052, pa = 0.228) in the BC group. These results suggest that BC phytochemicals may support spatial learning and memory. Mechanisms of effect may occur through specific antioxidant-mediated neuroprotective pathways and/or modulation of aspects of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis.
Original languageEnglish
Article number11568
Number of pages18
JournalInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume26
Issue number23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Nov 2025

Keywords

  • learning
  • corticosterone
  • antioxidant
  • stress
  • blackcurrant
  • memory
  • polyphenol

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