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Brain research bulletin · Dec 2009
The effects of acute stress and acute corticosterone administration on the immobility response in rats.
- Sergio R Zamudio, Lucía Quevedo-Corona, Linda Garcés, and Fidel De La Cruz.
- Department of Physiology, National School of Biological Sciences, National Polytechnic Institute, México D.F., Mexico. zrzamudio@hotmail.com
- Brain Res. Bull. 2009 Dec 16; 80 (6): 331-6.
AbstractThe immobility response is an innate antipredatory behavior in a broad variety of species. The immobility response varies in its postural components but in general is characterized by an absence of movement and a relative unresponsiveness to stimuli. Experimentally in rats, clamping the neck followed by body inversion and manual restrain elicits a response called "immobility by clamping the neck". Stress reactions protect animals against predators and are characterized by activation of the sympathetic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal systems. However, in mammals, the role of acute stress as a modulator of immobility response has been less studied. The aim of our study was to assess the effects of acute stress and the injection of corticosterone (5mg/kg, ip) on immobility by clamping the neck in rats. We observed that either previous acute stress caused by forced exposure to elevated open platform or application of a heat-pain stimulus to the rat's tail during the immobility increased the duration of the immobility response caused by clamping the neck. Also, the corticosterone produced a rapid increase (15 min after injection) in the duration of this immobility response. Our results show that the acute stress, in rats, is a facilitator of the immobility response and suggest a possible nongenomic rapid action of corticosterone over brain structures that control this behavior.
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