Muñoz-Abellán C, Andero R, Nadal R, Armario A
Institut de Neurociències, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2008 Sep;33(8):1139-50. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2008.06.002. Epub 2008 Jul 21.
Exposure of rodents to cats or certain cat odors results in long-term behavioral effects reminiscent of enhanced anxiety that have been considered to model post-traumatic stress disorder. However, other severe stressors such as tail-shock or immobilization in wooden boards (IMO) appear to induce shorter lasting changes in anxiety. In addition, there are controversial results regarding the effects of urine/feces odors. In the present work, we studied in two experiments the relationship between the degree of stress experienced by the animals during exposure to IMO, urine odors or fur odors (as assessed by hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activation and plasma glucose) and the short- and long-term behavioral consequences. In the first experiment, rats were individually exposed for 15 min to a novel environment (white large cages) containing either clean cat litter (controls) or litter soiled by cats (urine odors). Half of the rats in each condition were left to freely explore the environment whereas the others were subjected to immobilization (IMO) within the cages. Although ACTH, corticosterone and glucose responses to IMO were much stronger than those to the white cages with clean litter or urine odors (which did not differ from each other), no effect of treatments on anxiety-like behavior in the elevated plus-maze (EPM) were found one week later. However, previous IMO exposure did cause sensitization of the ACTH response to the EPM. In the second experiment, the response to white large cages containing either no odor (controls), litter soiled by cats (urine odor) or a cloth impregnated with cat odor (fur odor) was compared. Urine and fur odors elicited similar ACTH and corticosterone responses that were higher than those of controls, but plasma glucose levels were slightly higher in rats exposed to fur odor. When compared to controls, activity was only diminished in the novel cages containing fur odor. Similarly, fur odor-exposed rats, but not those exposed to urine odor, showed signs of enhanced anxiety in the EPM seven days later, although the ACTH response to the EPM was similar in the three groups. The present data demonstrate: (a) a marked dissociation between the degree of ACTH, corticosterone and glucose responses to stressors and their long-term anxiety-like effects; (b) that the type of cat odor is critical in determining the short-term and long-term physiological and behavioral consequences of exposure; and (c) that plasma ACTH released during brief exposure to the EPM does not appear to reflect anxiety-like behavior.
将啮齿动物暴露于猫或某些猫的气味中会导致长期行为影响,这种影响让人联想到焦虑增强,人们认为这可模拟创伤后应激障碍。然而,其他严重应激源,如尾部电击或固定在木板上(IMO),似乎会引起焦虑的持续时间较短的变化。此外,关于尿液/粪便气味的影响存在有争议的结果。在本研究中,我们在两个实验中研究了动物在暴露于IMO、尿液气味或皮毛气味期间所经历的应激程度(通过下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺激活和血糖评估)与短期和长期行为后果之间的关系。在第一个实验中,将大鼠单独暴露于一个新环境(白色大笼子)中15分钟,该环境中要么装有干净的猫砂(对照组),要么装有被猫弄脏的猫砂(尿液气味)。每种情况下的一半大鼠被留下自由探索环境,而另一半则在笼子里接受固定(IMO)。尽管对IMO的促肾上腺皮质激素、皮质酮和葡萄糖反应比对装有干净猫砂或尿液气味的白色笼子的反应要强得多(后两者之间没有差异),但一周后未发现处理对高架十字迷宫(EPM)中类似焦虑行为有影响。然而,先前的IMO暴露确实导致了对EPM的促肾上腺皮质激素反应的致敏。在第二个实验中,比较了对没有气味(对照组)、被猫弄脏的猫砂(尿液气味)或浸有猫气味的布(皮毛气味)的白色大笼子的反应。尿液和皮毛气味引起的促肾上腺皮质激素和皮质酮反应相似,且高于对照组,但暴露于皮毛气味的大鼠的血糖水平略高。与对照组相比,仅在装有皮毛气味的新笼子中的活动减少。同样,暴露于皮毛气味的大鼠,而不是暴露于尿液气味的大鼠,在七天后的EPM中表现出焦虑增强的迹象,尽管三组对EPM的促肾上腺皮质激素反应相似。目前的数据表明:(a)促肾上腺皮质激素、皮质酮和葡萄糖对应激源的反应程度与其长期类似焦虑的影响之间存在明显的分离;(b)猫气味的类型在决定暴露的短期和长期生理及行为后果方面至关重要;(c)在短暂暴露于EPM期间释放的血浆促肾上腺皮质激素似乎不能反映类似焦虑的行为。