Chung K K, Martinez M, Herbert J
Department of Anatomy, MRC Cambridge Centre for Brain Repair, University of Cambridge, UK.
Neuroscience. 1999;92(2):613-25. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(99)00028-7.
Intraspecific confrontation has been used to study effect of depleting central serotonin on the adaptation of male rats to repeated social stress (social defeat). Four groups of adult male rats were used (serotonin depletion/sham: stressed; serotonin depletion/sham: non-stressed). Central serotonin was reduced (by 59-97%) by a single infusion of the neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxtryptamine (150 microg) into the cerebral ventricles; levels of dopamine and noradrenaline were unaltered (rats received appropriate uptake blockers prior to neurotoxic infusions). Sham-operated animals received solute only. Rats were then either exposed daily for 10 days to a second larger aggressive male in the latter's home cage, or simply transferred to an empty cage (control procedure). Rats with reduced serotonin failed to show the increased freezing behaviour during the pre-defeat phase of the social interaction test characteristic of sham animals. There was no change in the residents' behaviour. Core temperature increased during aggressive interaction in sham rats, and this did not adapt with repeated stress. By contrast, stress-induced hyperthermia was accentuated in serotonin-reduced rats as the number of defeat sessions increased. Basal core temperature was unaffected by serotonin depletion. Heart rate increased during social defeat, but this did not adapt with repeated stress; serotonin depletion had no effect on this cardiovascular response. Basal corticosterone was increased in serotonin-depleted rats, but the progressive reduction in stress response over days was not altered. C-fos expression in the brain was not altered in control (non-stressed) rats by serotonin reduction in the areas examined, but there was increased expression after repeated social stress in the medial amygdala of 5-HT depleted rats. These experiments show that reduction of serotonin alters responses to repeated social stress in male rats, and suggests a role for serotonin in the adaptive process.
种内对抗已被用于研究中枢5-羟色胺耗竭对雄性大鼠适应反复社会应激(社会挫败)的影响。使用了四组成年雄性大鼠(5-羟色胺耗竭/假手术:应激;5-羟色胺耗竭/假手术:非应激)。通过向脑室单次注入神经毒素5,7-二羟基色胺(150微克)使中枢5-羟色胺减少(减少59%-97%);多巴胺和去甲肾上腺素水平未改变(大鼠在接受神经毒性注入前接受了适当的摄取阻断剂)。假手术动物仅接受溶质。然后,大鼠要么每天在另一只体型更大的具有攻击性的雄性大鼠的笼舍中暴露10天,要么简单地转移到一个空笼中(对照程序)。5-羟色胺减少的大鼠在社会互动测试的挫败前阶段未表现出假手术动物特有的僵住行为增加。居住大鼠的行为没有变化。假手术大鼠在攻击性互动期间核心体温升高,且这种情况不会随着反复应激而适应。相比之下,随着挫败次数增加,5-羟色胺减少的大鼠应激诱导的体温过高会加剧。基础核心体温不受5-羟色胺耗竭的影响。社会挫败期间心率增加,但这种情况不会随着反复应激而适应;5-羟色胺耗竭对这种心血管反应没有影响。5-羟色胺耗竭的大鼠基础皮质酮增加,但数天内应激反应的逐渐降低没有改变。在所检查的区域,5-羟色胺减少对对照(非应激)大鼠大脑中的C-fos表达没有影响,但在5-羟色胺耗竭的大鼠反复社会应激后,杏仁核内侧的表达增加。这些实验表明,5-羟色胺减少会改变雄性大鼠对反复社会应激的反应,并提示5-羟色胺在适应过程中发挥作用。