Literature DB >> 23318656

Differential effects of chronic social stress and fluoxetine on meal patterns in mice.

Jaswinder Kumar1, Jen-Chieh Chuang, Elisa S Na, Anna Kuperman, Andrea G Gillman, Shibani Mukherjee, Jeffrey M Zigman, Colleen A McClung, Michael Lutter.   

Abstract

Both chronic stress and antidepressant medications have been associated with changes in body weight. In the current study, we investigate mechanisms by which stress and antidepressants interact to affect meal patterns. A group of mice was subjected to the chronic social defeat stress model of major depression followed by fluoxetine treatment and was subsequently analyzed for food intake using metabolic cages. We report that chronic social defeat stress increases food intake by specifically increasing meal size, an effect that is reversed by fluoxetine treatment. In an attempt to gain mechanistic insight into changes in meal patterning induced by stress and fluoxetine, fasting serum samples were collected every 4h over a 24-h period, and acyl-ghrelin, leptin, and corticosterone levels were measured. Chronic stress induces a peak in acyl-ghrelin levels just prior to the onset of the dark phase, which is shifted in mice treated with fluoxetine. Taken together, these results indicate that stress increases food intake by decreasing satiation, and that fluoxetine can reverse stress-induced changes in meal patterns. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23318656      PMCID: PMC3606634          DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2012.12.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appetite        ISSN: 0195-6663            Impact factor:   3.868


  67 in total

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2.  Changes in weight during a 1-year trial of fluoxetine.

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5.  Cognitive and neural correlates of depression-like behaviour in socially defeated mice: an animal model of depression with cognitive dysfunction.

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Review 8.  Chronic and acute effects of stress on energy balance: are there appropriate animal models?

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Review 9.  The use of animal models to decipher physiological and neurobiological alterations of anorexia nervosa patients.

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10.  Influence of Aging and Gender Differences on Feeding Behavior and Ghrelin-Related Factors during Social Isolation in Mice.

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