Divergent changes in social stress-induced motivation in male and female mice

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Megan McGraw, Cooper Christensen, Hailey Nelson, Ai-Jun Li, Emily Qualls-Creekmore
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Abstract

Exposure to stressors has been shown to dysregulate motivated behaviors in a bidirectional manner over time. The relationship between stress and motivation is relevant to psychological disorders, including depression, binge eating, and substance use disorder; however, this relationship is not well characterized, especially in females, despite their increased risk of these disorders. Social defeat stress is a common model to study stress-induced motivation changes, however, historically this model excluded females due to lack of female-to-female aggression and unreliable male-to-female aggression. Additionally, changes in motivation are often assessed well after stress exposure ends, potentially missing or occluding changes to motivation during stress. Recently, the chronic non-discriminatory social defeat stress (CNSDS) model has demonstrated social defeat of male and female C57BL/6J mice by simultaneously exposing both mice to an aggressive male CD-1 mouse. Here we use this model to directly compare changes in the motivated behavior of male and female mice during and following chronic stress. We hypothesized that motivated behavioral responses would be dysregulated during stress and that the effects would worsen as the stress exposure continued. To monitor motivated behavior, mice had access to a Feeding Experimental Device.3 (FED3), a home cage device for operant responding. Operant responding was monitored prior to, during, and after stress by measuring nose pokes for sucrose pellets on a modified progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement. Our results demonstrated divergent behavioral outcomes between males and female mice in response to stress; where male mice increased motivated behavior during stress only, whereas female mice exhibited a decrease in motivation during and after stress. This study highlights the need to investigate the effects of stress-induced motivation over time, as well as the increased need to understand differences in the stress response in females.
雄性和雌性小鼠社会压力诱导动机的不同变化。
随着时间的推移,暴露于压力源会以双向的方式失调动机行为。压力和动机之间的关系与心理障碍有关,包括抑郁、暴饮暴食和药物滥用;然而,这种关系并没有很好地表征,特别是在女性中,尽管她们患这些疾病的风险增加。社会失败压力是研究压力诱发动机变化的常用模型,但由于缺乏女性对女性的攻击和不可靠的男性对女性的攻击,历史上该模型将女性排除在外。此外,在压力暴露结束后,动机的变化通常被很好地评估,可能会遗漏或阻塞压力期间动机的变化。最近,慢性非歧视性社会失败应激(CNSDS)模型通过将雄性和雌性C57BL/6J小鼠同时暴露于具有攻击性的雄性CD-1小鼠,证明了它们的社会失败。在这里,我们使用这个模型来直接比较雄性和雌性小鼠在慢性应激期间和之后的动机行为的变化。我们假设动机行为反应在压力下会失调,并且随着压力暴露的持续,影响会恶化。为了监测小鼠的动机行为,研究人员让小鼠使用喂养实验装置3 (FED3),这是一种用于操作反应的家庭笼装置。在改进的渐进比例强化计划中,通过测量蔗糖颗粒的鼻子戳量,在应力之前,期间和之后监测操作反应。我们的研究结果表明,雄性和雌性小鼠在应激反应中的行为结果是不同的;雄鼠只在压力下增加了动机行为,而雌鼠在压力中和压力后表现出了动机的减少。这项研究强调了随着时间的推移,有必要调查压力诱发动机的影响,以及越来越需要了解女性压力反应的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Physiology & Behavior
Physiology & Behavior 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
3.40%
发文量
274
审稿时长
47 days
期刊介绍: Physiology & Behavior is aimed at the causal physiological mechanisms of behavior and its modulation by environmental factors. The journal invites original reports in the broad area of behavioral and cognitive neuroscience, in which at least one variable is physiological and the primary emphasis and theoretical context are behavioral. The range of subjects includes behavioral neuroendocrinology, psychoneuroimmunology, learning and memory, ingestion, social behavior, and studies related to the mechanisms of psychopathology. Contemporary reviews and theoretical articles are welcomed and the Editors invite such proposals from interested authors.
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