Centre of Experimental Medicine, Institute of Normal and Pathological Physiology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, 841 04 Bratislava, Slovakia.
Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Unit, Department of Cognition, Emotion, and Methods in Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, 1010 Vienna, Austria.
Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Sep 25;22(19):10340. doi: 10.3390/ijms221910340.
Social isolation deprives rodents of social interactions that are critical for normal development of brain and behavior. Several studies have indicated that postweaning isolation rearing may affect nitric oxide (NO) production. The aim of this study was to compare selected behavioral and biochemical changes related to NO production in the brain of rats reared in social isolation for different duration. At the age of 21 days, male Sprague Dawley rats were randomly assigned into four groups reared in isolation or socially for 10 or 29 weeks. At the end of the rearing, open-field and prepulse inhibition (PPI) tests were carried out. Furthermore, in several brain areas we assessed NO synthase (NOS) activity, protein expression of nNOS and iNOS isoforms and the concentration of conjugated dienes (CD), a marker of oxidative damage and lipid peroxidation. Social isolation for 10 weeks resulted in a significant decrease in PPI, which was accompanied by a decrease in NOS activity in the cerebral cortex and the cerebellum, an increase in iNOS in the hippocampus and an increase in CD concentration in cortex homogenate. On the other hand, a 29 week isolation had an opposite effect on NOS activity, which increased in the cerebral cortex and the cerebellum in animals reared in social isolation, accompanied by a decrease in CD concentration. The decrease in NOS activity after 10 weeks of isolation might have been caused by chronic stress induced by social isolation, which has been documented in previous studies. The increased oxidative state might result in the depleted NO bioavailability, as NO reacts with superoxide radical creating peroxynitrite. After 29 weeks of isolation, this loss of NO might be compensated by the subsequent increase in NOS activity.
社交隔离剥夺了啮齿动物正常发育所需的社交互动。几项研究表明,断奶后隔离饲养可能会影响一氧化氮(NO)的产生。本研究旨在比较不同时间社交隔离饲养的大鼠的一些与脑内 NO 产生相关的行为和生化变化。21 天大时,雄性 Sprague Dawley 大鼠被随机分为四组,分别进行 10 或 29 周的隔离或社交饲养。饲养结束后,进行旷场和条件性听觉惊吓反应(PPI)测试。此外,我们在大脑的几个区域评估了一氧化氮合酶(NOS)活性、nNOS 和 iNOS 同工型的蛋白表达以及共轭二烯(CD)的浓度,CD 是氧化损伤和脂质过氧化的标志物。10 周的社交隔离导致 PPI 显著降低,这伴随着大脑皮层和小脑 NOS 活性的降低,海马 iNOS 的增加,以及皮质匀浆中 CD 浓度的增加。另一方面,29 周的隔离对 NOS 活性产生了相反的影响,在社交隔离饲养的动物中,大脑皮层和小脑的 NOS 活性增加,伴随着 CD 浓度的降低。10 周隔离后 NOS 活性的降低可能是由社交隔离引起的慢性应激所致,这在以前的研究中已有记载。增加的氧化状态可能导致 NO 生物利用度降低,因为 NO 与超氧自由基反应生成过氧亚硝酸盐。29 周隔离后,NOS 活性的增加可能会补偿 NO 的损失。