Jaisinghani Suraj, Rosenkranz J Amiel
Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, The Chicago Medical School, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, 3333 Green Bay Road, North Chicago, IL 60064 USA.
Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, The Chicago Medical School, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, 3333 Green Bay Road, North Chicago, IL 60064 USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2015 Sep 1;290:172-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2015.04.048. Epub 2015 May 5.
Repeated stress can trigger episodes of depression, along with symptoms of anhedonia and anxiety. Although often modeled separately, anxiogenic factors potently modulate hedonic, or appetitive, behavior. While repeated stress can increase anxiety and decrease appetitive behavior, it is not clear whether repeated stress can influence the impact of anxiogenic factors on appetitive behavior. This study tests whether repeated stress shifts behavior in a task that measures anxiogenic-appetitive balance. To test this, adult male rats were trained to lever press for sucrose pellet reward, and the effect of anxiogenic bright light on this behavior was measured. The impact of the bright light anxiogenic stimulus on lever pressing was compared between groups exposed to either daily repeated social defeat stress or control handling. We found that repeated stress reduced exploration in the open field and decreased social interaction, but had minimal effect on baseline lever pressing for reward. Repeated stress substantially enhanced the effect of anxiogenic bright light on lever pressing. This effect was greater two days after the last stress exposure, and began to diminish within two weeks. These data demonstrate that the anxiogenic and anhedonic features induced by repeated stress can be separately measured, and that the impact of anxiogenic stimuli can be greatly enhanced after repeated stress, even in the face of appetitive drive. The data also demonstrate that some apparent anhedonic-like effects of repeated stress can be due to increased sensitivity to anxiogenic stimuli, and may reflect an imbalance in an appetitive approach-withdrawal continuum.
反复应激可引发抑郁发作,同时伴有快感缺失和焦虑症状。尽管焦虑诱发因素通常被单独建模,但它们会有力地调节享乐或欲求行为。虽然反复应激会增加焦虑并降低欲求行为,但尚不清楚反复应激是否会影响焦虑诱发因素对欲求行为的影响。本研究测试反复应激是否会在一项测量焦虑诱发 - 欲求平衡的任务中改变行为。为了验证这一点,成年雄性大鼠接受训练,通过按压杠杆来获取蔗糖颗粒奖励,并测量焦虑诱发的强光对这种行为的影响。在暴露于每日反复的社会挫败应激或对照处理的组之间,比较强光焦虑诱发刺激对杠杆按压的影响。我们发现,反复应激减少了旷场实验中的探索行为并降低了社交互动,但对获取奖励的基线杠杆按压影响最小。反复应激显著增强了焦虑诱发的强光对杠杆按压的影响。这种影响在最后一次应激暴露两天后更大,并在两周内开始减弱。这些数据表明,反复应激诱发的焦虑和快感缺失特征可以分别测量,并且即使面对欲求驱力,反复应激后焦虑诱发刺激的影响也会大大增强。数据还表明,反复应激的一些明显的类似快感缺失的效应可能是由于对焦虑诱发刺激的敏感性增加,并且可能反映了欲求趋近 - 回避连续体中的失衡。