中风大鼠的同理心受到社会环境的调节

K. Shinozuka, N. Tajiri, H. Ishikawa, Julian P. Tuazon, Jea-Young Lee, P. Sanberg, Sydney Zarriello, Sydney Corey, Y. Kaneko, C. Borlongan
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引用次数: 4

摘要

啮齿类动物表现出“同理心”,即当共同经历不同的社会创伤事件时,同伴感受到的身体疼痛或心理压力。目前的研究通过允许与笼子里的同伴共同经历中风,测试了在遭受实验性神经紊乱的成年大鼠中发生共情的假设。通过一般运动活动、大鼠鬼脸量表(RGS)和血浆皮质酮测量心理应激。生理相关性通过胸腺晚期糖基化终末产物(AGE)相关蛋白的Western blot分析来测量。中风动物和与中风大鼠同住的非中风大鼠的一般运动活动受损,表明心理应激的行为表现从受伤动物转移到未受伤动物,导致社会抑制。无论社会环境如何,中风大鼠的RGS都更高。脑卒中后第3天,与脑卒中大鼠一起生活的脑卒中动物血浆皮质酮水平显著升高,而与非脑卒中大鼠一起生活的脑卒中动物血浆皮质酮水平显著升高,表明共情上调了生理应激水平。胸腺中与AGE相关的五种蛋白的表达反映了观察到的一般运动活动、RGS和血浆皮质酮水平的模式。这些结果表明,卒中诱发的心理应激表现在行为和生理两个层面,并似乎受到共情相关社会环境的影响。
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Empathy in stroke rats is modulated by social settings
Rodents display “empathy” defined as perceived physical pain or psychological stress by cagemates when co-experiencing socially distinct traumatic events. The present study tested the hypothesis that empathy occurs in adult rats subjected to an experimental neurological disorder, by allowing co-experience of stroke with cagemates. Psychological stress was measured by general locomotor activity, Rat Grimace Scale (RGS), and plasma corticosterone. Physiological correlates were measured by Western blot analysis of advanced glycation endproducts (AGE)-related proteins in the thymus. General locomotor activity was impaired in stroke animals and in non-stroke rats housed with stroke rats suggesting transfer of behavioral manifestation of psychological stress from an injured animal to a non-injured animal leading to social inhibition. RGS was higher in stroke rats regardless of social settings. Plasma corticosterone levels at day 3 after stroke were significantly higher in stroke animals housed with stroke rats, but not with non-stroke rats, indicating that empathy upregulated physiological stress level. The expression of five proteins related to AGE in the thymus reflected the observed pattern of general locomotor activity, RGS, and plasma corticosterone levels. These results indicate that stroke-induced psychological stress manifested on both the behavioral and physiological levels and appeared to be affected by empathy-associated social settings.
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