| Literature DB >> 26367455 |
Muhammad S Riaz1, Martin O Bohlen1, Barak W Gunter1, Henry Quentin2, Craig A Stockmeier2, Ian A Paul2.
Abstract
Exposure to unpredictable chronic mild stress (CUS) is a commonly used protocol in rats that is reported to evoke antidepressant-reversible behaviors such as loss of preference for a sweetened water solution which is taken as an analog of the anhedonia seen in major depression. However, the induction of anhedonic-like behavior by chronic mild stress, gauged by an animal's preference for sucrose solution, is not fully reproducible and consistent across laboratories. In this study, we compared a widely used behavioral marker of anhedonia - the sucrose preference test, with another phenotypic marker of emotional valence, social interaction-associated ultrasonic vocalizations as well as a marker of an anxiety-like phenotype, novelty-suppressed feeding, and cognitive performance in the eight arm radial maze task in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats. Chronic four-week exposure to unpredictable mild stressors resulted in 1) attenuation of social interaction-associated ultrasonic vocalizations 2) attenuation of spatial memory performance on the radial arm maze 3) attenuation of body weight gain and 4) increased latency to feed in a novelty-suppressed feeding task. However, chronic exposure to CUS did not result in any significant change in sucrose preference at one-week and three-week intervals. Our results argue for the utility of ultrasonic vocalizations in a social interaction context as a comparable alternative or adjunct to the sucrose preference test in determining the efficacy of CUS to generate an anhedonic-like phenotypic state.Entities:
Keywords: Anhedonia; Cognitive decline; Major depression; Spatial navigation; Sprague dawley rats; Stress; USVs; Ultrasonic vocalizations; Unpredictable chronic mild stress (CUS); Working memory
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26367455 PMCID: PMC4633347 DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2015.09.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Behav ISSN: 0031-9384