Physiology & behavior
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Physiology & behavior · Nov 2015
BDNF and COX-2 participate in anti-depressive mechanisms of catalpol in rats undergoing chronic unpredictable mild stress.
Catalpol, a major compound in Rehmannia glutinosa with both medicinal and nutritional values, has been previously confirmed to shorten the duration of immobility in mice exposed to tail suspension and forced swimming tests. This study attempted to examine the anti-depressive mechanisms of catalpol in rats undergoing chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) by involving brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). CUMS-exposed rats were given catalpol daily (5, 10, and 20mg/kg, ig) or a reference drug, fluoxetine hydrochloride (FH, 10mg/kg, ig), at 5 weeks after starting the CUMS procedure. ⋯ Moreover, CUMS caused excessively elevated levels of serum corticosterone, an index of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis hyperactivation, in a manner attenuated by catalpol and FH administration. Catalpol administration also further decreased BDNF activities, downregulated the mRNA expression of BDNF and tropomyosin-related kinase B (TrkB), and reversed the excessive elevation in the activities and mRNA expression levels of COX-2 and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in the hippocampus and frontal cortex of rats undergoing CUMS. Results indicate that catalpol can ameliorate CUMS-induced depression-like behavior, and suggest its mechanisms may partially be ascribed to restoring HPA axis dysfunctions, upregulating BDNF expression and its cognate receptor TrkB, and downregulating COX-2 expression, thereby reducing PGE2 levels in the brain.
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Physiology & behavior · Nov 2015
Comparative StudyPersistent, comorbid pain and anxiety can be uncoupled in a mouse model.
Clinically, pain and anxiety frequently coexist; however, these two conditions' interaction is limited and contradictory in animal studies. In this study, we combined social defeat (SD) stress with Freund's adjuvant (CFA)-induced persistent inflammatory pain to investigate the reciprocal relationship between anxiety-like and nociceptive behaviors in two mouse strains. C57BL/6J mice subjected to the 10-day period of SD stress by repeated CD-1 mice aggression exhibited significant social interaction avoidance behaviors in the social interaction (SI) test, which is believed to represent the symptoms of anxiety. ⋯ Interestingly, CFA-inflammatory mice exposed to SD stress were not accompanied by a worsening of pain and anxiety-like behaviors in most tests. In contrast, the SD stress-induced social avoidance was significantly antagonized by combining with CFA-inflammatory pain. These findings suggest that persistent inflammatory pain and SD stress-induced anxiety may not necessarily exacerbate one another in animal models of comorbidity.
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Physiology & behavior · Oct 2015
Wnt-5a prevents Aβ-induced deficits in long-term potentiation and spatial memory in rats.
Although the neurotoxicity of amyloid β (Aβ) protein in Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been reported widely, the exact molecular mechanism underlying the Aβ-induced synaptic dysfunction and memory impairment remains largely unclear. Growing evidence indicates that wingless-type (Wnt) signaling plays an important role in neuronal development, synapse formation and synaptic plasticity. ⋯ In MWM test, Aβ25-35 alone significantly disrupted spatial learning and memory ability of rats, while pretreatment with Wnt-5a effectively prevented the impairments induced by Aβ25-35. These results in the present study demonstrated for the first time the neuroprotective effects of Wnt-5a against Aβ-induced in vivo synaptic plasticity impairment and memory disorder, suggesting that Wnt signaling pathway is one of the important targets of Aβ neurotoxicity and Wnt-5a might be used as one of the putative candidates for the therapeutic intervention of AD.
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Physiology & behavior · Oct 2015
Assessment of incising ethology in the absence and presence of jaw muscle hyperalgesia in a mouse home cage environment.
Assessment of oral motor behavior in a mouse is challenging due to the lack of currently available techniques that are non-invasive and allow long-term assessment in a home cage environment. The purpose of this study was to evaluate incising behavior using mouse chow attached to a three-dimensional force transducer that was mounted on the existing home cage. In addition, a persistent hyperalgesia condition was introduced to evaluate the sensitivity of the technique to identify incising behavioral changes. ⋯ The findings from this study support the use of recording three dimensional incising forces as a sensitive measure of incising behavior. This novel technique allowed the identification of specific incising variables that were differentially affected in female and male mice during a persistent hyperalgesia. The data were collected in the home cage environment with minimal bias such as experimenter interaction. Similar to other dental pain studies, mice were able to maintain normal incising activity levels per day (total incisions, total number of incising episodes) even in the presence of hyperalgesia.
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Physiology & behavior · Oct 2015
Maternal nicotine exposure during lactation alters food preference, anxiety-like behavior and the brain dopaminergic reward system in the adult rat offspring.
The mesolimbic reward pathway is activated by drugs of abuse and palatable food, causing a sense of pleasure, which promotes further consumption of these substances. Children whose parents smoke are more vulnerable to present addictive-like behavior to drugs and food. We evaluated the association between maternal nicotine exposure during lactation with changes in feeding, behavior and in the dopaminergic reward system. ⋯ Regarding behavior, N animals showed an increase in the time spent in the EPM center and a reduction in relative activity in the OF center. N offspring presented lower dopamine receptor (D2R) and transporter (DAT) contents in the nucleus accumbens, and lower D2R in the arcuate nucleus. Postnatal exposure to nicotine increases preference for sugar and anxiety levels in the adult progeny possibly due to a decrease in dopaminergic action in the nucleus accumbens and arcuate nucleus.