Literature DB >> 27457669

Persistent conditioned place preference to aggression experience in adult male sexually-experienced CD-1 mice.

S A Golden1, H Aleyasin2, R Heins1, M Flanigan2, M Heshmati2, A Takahashi2,3, S J Russo2, Y Shaham1.   

Abstract

We recently developed a conditioned place preference (CPP) procedure, commonly used to study rewarding drug effects, to demonstrate that dominant sexually-experienced CD-1 male mice form CPP to contexts previously associated with defeating subordinate male C57BL/6J mice. Here we further characterized conditioned and unconditioned aggression behavior in CD-1 mice. In Exp. 1 we used CD-1 mice that displayed a variable spectrum of unconditioned aggressive behavior toward younger subordinate C57BL/6J intruder mice. We then trained the CD-1 mice in the CPP procedure where one context was intruder-paired, while a different context was not. We then tested for aggression CPP 1 day after training. In Exp. 2, we tested CD-1 mice for aggression CPP 1 day and 18 days after training. In Exp. 3-4, we trained the CD-1 mice to lever-press for palatable food and tested them for footshock punishment-induced suppression of food-reinforced responding. In Exp. 5, we characterized unconditioned aggression in hybrid CD-1 × C57BL/6J D1-Cre or D2-Cre F1 generation crosses. Persistent aggression CPP was observed in CD-1 mice that either immediately attacked C57BL/6J mice during all screening sessions or mice that gradually developed aggressive behavior during the screening phase. In contrast, CD-1 mice that did not attack the C57BL/6J mice during screening did not develop CPP to contexts previously paired with C57BL/6J mice. The aggressive phenotype did not predict resistance to punishment-induced suppression of food-reinforced responding. CD-1 × D1-Cre or D2-Cre F1 transgenic mice showed strong unconditioned aggression. Our study demonstrates that aggression experience causes persistent CPP and introduces transgenic mice for circuit studies of aggression.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd and International Behavioural and Neural Genetics Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aggression; CD-1; D1-Cre; D2-Cre; conditioned place preference; food self-administration; mice; punishment; reward

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27457669      PMCID: PMC5243174          DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12310

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genes Brain Behav        ISSN: 1601-183X            Impact factor:   3.449


  60 in total

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  19 in total

Review 1.  An emerging role for the lateral habenula in aggressive behavior.

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5.  Nucleus Accumbens Drd1-Expressing Neurons Control Aggression Self-Administration and Aggression Seeking in Mice.

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7.  Compulsive Addiction-like Aggressive Behavior in Mice.

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8.  Animal Models of (or for) Aggression Reward, Addiction, and Relapse: Behavior and Circuits.

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9.  Cell-Type-Specific Role of ΔFosB in Nucleus Accumbens In Modulating Intermale Aggression.

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