Literature DB >> 18554730

The role of prior stressor controllability and the dorsal raphé nucleus in sucrose preference and social exploration.

John P Christianson1, Evan D Paul, Myra Irani, Brittany M Thompson, Kenneth H Kubala, Raz Yirmiya, Linda R Watkins, Steven F Maier.   

Abstract

Research investigating how control over stressors affects behavior often utilizes freezing and shuttle escape learning as the behavioral endpoints. These endpoints have been argued to reflect anxious or depressed states, but these descriptions are problematic. The present study sought to determine the impact of stressor controllability and the dorsal raphé nucleus (DRN) on sucrose preference and juvenile social exploration, putative measures of anhedonia and anxiety that are commonly used in studies of stress per se. In Experiment 1 rats were exposed to escapable stress (ES) or yoked-inescapable stress (IS) tailshocks. In Experiment 2 ES or IS was given 7 days before all rats received IS. In Experiment 3 the DRN was inactivated during IS by microinjection of 8-OH-DPAT. Sucrose preference and social exploration were tested for several days after stress. A fourth experiment confirmed that juvenile social exploration is sensitive to traditional beta-carboline and benzodiazepine manipulations. Both ES and IS reduced sucrose preference, but only IS reduced social exploration. Prior treatment with ES prevented the effect of IS on social exploration but did not prevent the effect of IS on sucrose preference and inactivation of the DRN prevented the effect of IS on social exploration but did not change sucrose preference. The present results indicate that social exploration but not sucrose preference is sensitive to prior stressor controllability, and that DRN activation mediates the effect of IS on social exploration. We argue that DRN-5-HT activation mediates a state of generalized anxiety produced by uncontrollable stress and that juvenile social exploration is a useful behavioral endpoint in stressor controllability studies.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18554730      PMCID: PMC2583404          DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2008.04.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


  51 in total

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  54 in total

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2.  Short- and long-term consequences of stressor controllability in adolescent rats.

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Review 7.  Sex differences in anxiety and emotional behavior.

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8.  Effects of stressor controllability on diurnal physiological rhythms.

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9.  Behavioral control over shock blocks behavioral and neurochemical effects of later social defeat.

Authors:  J Amat; R M Aleksejev; E Paul; L R Watkins; S F Maier
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10.  Medial prefrontal cortical activation modulates the impact of controllable and uncontrollable stressor exposure on a social exploration test of anxiety in the rat.

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