Literature DB >> 21497767

Gender differences in locomotor and stereotypic behavior associated with l-carnitine treatment in mice.

Salvatore Benvenga1, Elenora Itri, Peter Hauser, Louis De Tolla, Sui-Foh Yu, Giuseppe Testa, Maria Angela Pappalardo, Francesco Trimarchi, Antonino Amato.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The carnitines exert neuroprotective and neuromodulatory actions, and carnitine supplementation increases locomotor activity (LMA) in experimental animals.
METHODS: We measured 13 indexes of LMA and 3 indexes of stereotypic activity (STA) in adult male and female caged mice. In a randomized 4-week trial, 10 males and 10 females received 50 mg/kg body weight PO l-carnitine, and another 10 males and 10 females received placebo.
RESULTS: Compared with placebo-treated females, placebo-treated males had a greater number of stereotypies (NSTs), stereotypy counts (STCs), stereotypy time (STT), and right front time (RFT), but smaller total distance traveled (TDT), margin distance (MD), number of vertical movements (NVMs), and left rear time (LRT). Compared with placebo-treated males, carnitine-treated males had greater horizontal activity (HA), movement time (MT), NVM, STT, TDT, STC, MD, LRT, and clockwise revolutions (CRs), but smaller left front time (LFT) and RFT. Compared with placebo-treated females, carnitine-treated females had greater NST, STC, STT, LFT, and RFT, but smaller NM, HA, NVM, VA, MT, anticlockwise revolutions (ACRs), CR, TDT, and MD; right rear time (RRT) remained statistically insignificant across all comparisons.
CONCLUSIONS: In summary, l-carnitine caused gender differences to persist for STC, diminish for NST and STT, disappear for LRT and NVM, change in the opposite direction for TDT and MD, appear de novo for HA, VA, NM, MT, and LFT, and remain absent for RRT and ACR. Some indexes of LMA and STA are sexually dimorphic in adult mice, and l-carnitine differentially maintains, diminishes/cancels, inverts, or creates the sexual dimorphism of particular indexes.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier HS Journals, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21497767     DOI: 10.1016/j.genm.2011.02.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gend Med        ISSN: 1550-8579


  1 in total

1.  Decreased anxiety- and depression-like behaviors and hyperactivity in a type 3 deiodinase-deficient mouse showing brain thyrotoxicosis and peripheral hypothyroidism.

Authors:  J Patrizia Stohn; M Elena Martinez; Arturo Hernandez
Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology       Date:  2016-08-24       Impact factor: 4.905

  1 in total

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