We evaluated the effects of pre-germinated brown rice (hatsuga genmai, PGR) on learning and memory and compared them with those of polished rice or cornstarch. In mice that were fed pellets of polished rice or PGR for two weeks, the learning ability in the Morris water maze test was significantly enhanced compared with mice that were fed cornstarch pellets. In the Y-maze test, the intake of food pellets for two weeks failed to affect spontaneous alternation behavior.
In this study, we gave the soybean powder-added food pellets (soybean pellets) to investigate anti-anxious effects of soybean in male mice. Twenty eight days after feeding control pellets or soybean pellets, we observed the behavioral changes in the elevated plus maze. There was no significant difference on the time spent in the open arms (%) between mice fed the control and soybean pellets. When we administered m-chlorophenylpipe razine (m-CPP, 2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) to mice, the mice fed control pellets showed the decrease in the time spent in the open arms, suggesting that anxiety-like behavior was induced by m-CPP. On the other hand, we could not observe the m-CPP-induced anxiety-like behavior in mice fed soybean pellets in this test. These results suggest that soybean pellets may attenuate anxiety-like behavior in mice.
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