Literature DB >> 10477049

Effect of predatory stress on sucrose intake and behavior on the plus-maze in male mice.

A Calvo-Torrent1, P F Brain, M Martinez.   

Abstract

In this study, the effect of the exposure of male mice to sensory stimuli from rats was assessed on both sucrose intake and the elevated plus-maze tests. CDl male mice were trained in the sucrose intake task (the prestress phase) and, subsequently, distributed into two groups. The stressed group was accommodated in the same room as rats and the control group with mice (the stress phase). After being transferred, animals were tested on sucrose intake and the plus-maze (acute tests) and retested three times a week for sucrose intake and once on plus-maze on the last day (chronic tests). After acute exposure to the predator, the only difference between stressed and control animals was a higher number of fecal boli left on the plus-maze by the former. During the chronic phase, stressed animals showed a lower level of sucrose intake and higher level of anxiety than controls. In conclusion, this study shows that chronic exposure of male mice to stimuli from rats reduces the sensitivity to the rewarding properties of sucrose and prevents the habituation to the plus-maze observed in controls. Thus, this study suggests that exposure of mice to sensory stimuli from rats may provide an animal model of stress, and that these species should not be routinely housed together.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10477049     DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9384(99)00051-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  25 in total

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10.  Role of glutamate NMDA receptors and nitric oxide located within the periaqueductal gray on defensive behaviors in mice confronted by predator.

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