Literature DB >> 25449533

Inoculation stress hypothesis of environmental enrichment.

Elizabeth J Crofton1, Yafang Zhang1, Thomas A Green2.   

Abstract

One hallmark of psychiatric conditions is the vast continuum of individual differences in susceptibility vs. resilience resulting from the interaction of genetic and environmental factors. The environmental enrichment paradigm is an animal model that is useful for studying a range of psychiatric conditions, including protective phenotypes in addiction and depression models. The major question is how environmental enrichment, a non-drug and non-surgical manipulation, can produce such robust individual differences in such a wide range of behaviors. This paper draws from a variety of published sources to outline a coherent hypothesis of inoculation stress as a factor producing the protective enrichment phenotypes. The basic tenet suggests that chronic mild stress from living in a complex environment and interacting non-aggressively with conspecifics can inoculate enriched rats against subsequent stressors and/or drugs of abuse. This paper reviews the enrichment phenotypes, mulls the fundamental nature of environmental enrichment vs. isolation, discusses the most appropriate control for environmental enrichment, and challenges the idea that cortisol/corticosterone equals stress. The intent of the inoculation stress hypothesis of environmental enrichment is to provide a scaffold with which to build testable hypotheses for the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying these protective phenotypes and thus provide new therapeutic targets to treat psychiatric/neurological conditions.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Corticosterone; Drug addiction; Environmental enrichment; Inoculation stress; Resilience

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25449533      PMCID: PMC4305384          DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2014.11.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev        ISSN: 0149-7634            Impact factor:   8.989


  177 in total

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6.  Enriched environment influences adrenocortical response to immune challenge and glutamate receptor gene expression in rat hippocampus.

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5.  Behavioral and physiological consequences of enrichment loss in rats.

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Review 7.  Modelling depression in animals: at the interface of reward and stress pathways.

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8.  Intermittent Administration of Haloperidol after Cortical Impact Injury Neither Impedes Spontaneous Recovery Nor Attenuates the Efficacy of Environmental Enrichment.

Authors:  Gina C Bao; Isabel H Bleimeister; Lydia A Zimmerman; JoDy L Wellcome; Peter J Niesman; Hannah L Radabaugh; Corina O Bondi; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 5.269

9.  Combining the Antipsychotic Drug Haloperidol and Environmental Enrichment after Traumatic Brain Injury Is a Double-Edged Sword.

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10.  Adolescent environmental enrichment prevents behavioral and physiological sequelae of adolescent chronic stress in female (but not male) rats.

Authors:  Brittany L Smith; Rachel L Morano; Yvonne M Ulrich-Lai; Brent Myers; Matia B Solomon; James P Herman
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