• Neuroscience · Jun 2016

    Altered metabolic activity in the developing brain of rats predisposed to high versus low depression-like behavior.

    • C R McCoy, S R Golf, M Melendez-Ferro, E Perez-Costas, M E Glover, N L Jackson, S A Stringfellow, P C Pugh, A D Fant, and S M Clinton.
    • Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology, 1720 7th Avenue South, SC 745, University of Alabama-Birmingham, AL, USA.
    • Neuroscience. 2016 Jun 2; 324: 469-84.

    AbstractIndividual differences in human temperament can increase the risk of psychiatric disorders like depression and anxiety. Our laboratory utilized a rat model of temperamental differences to assess neurodevelopmental factors underlying emotional behavior differences. Rats selectively bred for low novelty exploration (Low Responders, LR) display high levels of anxiety- and depression-like behavior compared to High Novelty Responder (HR) rats. Using transcriptome profiling, the present study uncovered vast gene expression differences in the early postnatal HR versus LR limbic brain, including changes in genes involved in cellular metabolism. These data led us to hypothesize that rats prone to high (versus low) anxiety/depression-like behavior exhibit distinct patterns of brain metabolism during the first weeks of life, which may reflect disparate patterns of synaptogenesis and brain circuit development. Thus, in a second experiment we examined activity of cytochrome C oxidase (COX), an enzyme responsible for ATP production and a correlate of metabolic activity, to explore functional energetic differences in the HR/LR early postnatal brain. We found that HR rats display higher COX activity in the amygdala and specific hippocampal subregions compared to LRs during the first 2 weeks of life. Correlational analysis examining COX levels across several brain regions and multiple early postnatal time points suggested desynchronization in the developmental timeline of the limbic HR versus LR brain during the first two postnatal weeks. These early divergent COX activity levels may reflect altered circuitry or synaptic activity in the early postnatal HR/LR brain, which could contribute to the emergence of their distinct behavioral phenotypes.Copyright © 2016 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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