Adolescent social stress alters the role of orexin innervation in the hindbrain in male hamsters.

IF 3.3 4区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Kevin M Moran, Ava Elana Enstrom, Leah Jarrell, Misheel Khashchuluun, Anna Tran, Yvon Delville
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Juvenile male hamsters exposed to chronic social stress eat more, gain weight, and have larger fat pads. The purpose of the present study was to address possible changes in food hoarding and orexin/hypocretin innervation in response to social stress. Male hamsters in early adolescence were exposed to a resident-intruder social stress paradigm or control condition daily for 2 weeks. Metabolism-related physiological measures and behaviors were tracked, and brains were immunocytochemically labeled for orexin-A. Our data confirm our previous observations on appetite, weight gain, and obesity, and showed a strong trend toward enhanced food hoarding as in prior studies. In addition, there were no statistically significant differences in orexin innervation in any brain area analyzed. However, unique correlation patterns were observed between orexin innervation and appetite or metabolic outcome. In particular, opposite correlations were observed between groups within the dorsal raphe nucleus, lateral parabrachial nucleus, and nucleus of the solitary tract. These opposite patterns of correlations suggest chronic social stress causes site-specific alterations in synaptic activity in relation with these behaviors.

青春期社会压力改变了雄性仓鼠后脑中奥曲肽神经支配的作用
长期处于社会压力下的幼年雄性仓鼠食量更大、体重增加、脂肪垫更大。本研究的目的是探讨囤积食物和奥曲肽/甲状腺素神经支配在应对社会压力时可能发生的变化。研究人员将处于青春期早期的雄性仓鼠置于居民-入侵者社会应激范式或对照组条件下,每天进行为期两周的观察。对与代谢相关的生理指标和行为进行了追踪,并对大脑进行了奥曲肽-A的免疫细胞化学标记。我们的数据证实了我们以前在食欲、体重增加和肥胖方面的观察结果,并显示出与以前的研究一样,囤积食物的现象有明显增强的趋势。此外,在所分析的大脑区域中,奥曲肽神经支配在统计学上没有显著差异。不过,在奥曲肽支配与食欲或代谢结果之间观察到了独特的相关模式。特别是,在背侧剑突核、外侧腮旁核和孤束核中观察到了组间相反的相关性。这些相反的相关模式表明,慢性社会压力会导致与这些行为相关的突触活动发生特定部位的改变。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroendocrinology
Journal of Neuroendocrinology 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
137
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Neuroendocrinology provides the principal international focus for the newest ideas in classical neuroendocrinology and its expanding interface with the regulation of behavioural, cognitive, developmental, degenerative and metabolic processes. Through the rapid publication of original manuscripts and provocative review articles, it provides essential reading for basic scientists and clinicians researching in this rapidly expanding field. In determining content, the primary considerations are excellence, relevance and novelty. While Journal of Neuroendocrinology reflects the broad scientific and clinical interests of the BSN membership, the editorial team, led by Professor Julian Mercer, ensures that the journal’s ethos, authorship, content and purpose are those expected of a leading international publication.
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