Behavioral and Neurochemical Changes in Rats with Recurrent Depression induced by chronic unpredictable stress.

IF 0.6 4区 医学 Q4 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Neuro endocrinology letters Pub Date : 2021-10-01
Cheng Hong, Libing Chen, Weiyue Kong, Danni Zhang, Lingfeng Wang, Jinkai Zhao, Xiaoming Zhong, Guangji Zhang, Zhen Huang, Fengmei Qiu
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Abstract

Objectives: The mechanism of recurrent depression remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the behavioural and neurochemical patterns of rats with recurrent depression.

Materials and methods: An animal model of recurrent depression was established using chronic unpredictable stress and imipramine hydrochloride. The behaviour of the rats was tested during the first onset and recurrence periods of depression. The levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), corticosterone (CORT), and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) in serum were detected by ELISA. The protein expressions of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) area of rats were detected by western blotting.

Results: The weight and sugar preference of the rats with recurrent depression were significantly decreased, and the immobility time of tail suspension was significantly increased during the first onset and recurrence periods. The modelling time of rats was shortened by one week in the recurrence period compared with that in the first onset. The model rats with recurrent depression had significantly increased ACTH and CORT and significantly decreased cAMP, CREB, and BDNF levels.

Conclusion: Rats with recurrent depression are highly susceptible to stress and exhibit depression-like behaviours such as weight loss, increased immobility time in tail suspension test, and reduced sucrose preference index. Moreover, the modelling time was shortened by one week, indicating an obvious susceptibility to recurrent depression. The significantly up-regulated neuroendocrine in the HPA and the significantly inhibited BDNF and protein expression factors in related signalling pathways may be involved in the increased susceptibility to recurrent depression.

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慢性不可预测应激引起的复发性抑郁症大鼠的行为和神经化学变化。
目的:复发性抑郁症的机制尚不清楚。本研究旨在评估复发性抑郁症大鼠的行为和神经化学模式。材料与方法:采用慢性不可预测应激联合盐酸丙咪嗪建立复发性抑郁症动物模型。在抑郁症首次发作和复发期间,对大鼠的行为进行了测试。ELISA法检测血清促肾上腺皮质激素(ACTH)、皮质酮(CORT)、环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)水平。采用western blotting法检测大鼠海马齿状回(DG)区脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)和cAMP反应元件结合蛋白(CREB)的蛋白表达。结果:抑郁症复发大鼠在首发期和复发期体重和糖偏好明显降低,悬尾不动时间明显增加。复发期大鼠造模时间较初发期缩短1周。复发性抑郁模型大鼠ACTH、CORT水平显著升高,cAMP、CREB、BDNF水平显著降低。结论:复发性抑郁大鼠易受应激影响,表现出抑郁样行为,如体重减轻、悬尾试验不动时间增加、蔗糖偏好指数降低等。而且,建模时间缩短了一周,表明有明显的复发性抑郁易感性。HPA神经内分泌显著上调,相关信号通路中BDNF及蛋白表达因子显著抑制,可能与复发性抑郁易感性增加有关。
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来源期刊
Neuro endocrinology letters
Neuro endocrinology letters 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
14.30%
发文量
24
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Neuroendocrinology Letters is an international, peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal covering the fields of Neuroendocrinology, Neuroscience, Neurophysiology, Neuropsychopharmacology, Psycho­neu­ro­immunology, Reproductive Medicine, Chro­no­biology, Human Ethology and re­lated fields for RAPID publication of Original Papers, Review Articles, State-of-the-art, Clinical Reports and other contributions from all the fields covered by Neuroendocrinology Letters. Papers from both basic research (methodology, molecular and cellular biology, anatomy, histology, biology, embryology, teratology, normal and pathological physiology, biophysics, pharmacology, pathology and experimental pathology, biochemistry, neurochemistry, enzymology, chronobiology, receptor studies, endocrinology, immunology and neuroimmunology, animal phy­siology, animal breeding and ethology, human ethology, psychology and others) and from clinical research (neurology, psychiatry and child psychiatry, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, endocrinology, immunology, cardiovascular studies, internal medicine, oncology and others) will be considered. The Journal publishes Original papers and Review Articles. Brief reports, Special Communications, proved they are based on adequate experimental evidence, Clinical Studies, Case Reports, Commentaries, Discussions, Letters to the Editor (correspondence column), Book Reviews, Congress Reports and other categories of articles (philosophy, art, social issues, medical and health policies, biomedical history, etc.) will be taken under consideration.
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