Prenatal Stress and Acute Stress Later in Life Impacts the Responses in Tests for Depressive-Like Behavior in a Sex-Specific Manner

Helle Mark Sickmann, Christian Skoven, Tina S. Arentzen, Niels Plath, Jesper F. Bastlund, Tim B. Dyrby, Kristi Anne Kohlmeier, Hui Zhang, Morten Pilgaard Kristensen

    Abstract

    Prenatal maternal stress
    increases the predisposition for affective disorders. Furthermore, women appear twice as likely as
    men to develop stress- and depression-related disorders. Comparable behavioral changes
    characteristic of clinical depression are found in rat offspring following prenatal stress (PS). These
    include increased helplessness, altered anxiety indicators and sleep modifications. Our purpose was
    to further investigate behavioral depression indices following PS as well as CNS structural changes
    including sex specificity of these variables. Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to repeated
    variable stress during days 13-21 of gestation. The PS paradigm consisted of two short-term
    stressors during the day (e.g. restraint and forced swimming) and a long-term stressor overnight (e.g.
    66
    fasting or lights on). We examined the rats at a young adult age for changes in locomotor activity,
    depressive- and anxiety-like behavior as well as sleep architecture. Some animals were analyzed for
    CNS microstructural changes based on diffusion MRI. Subsets of PS and control rats were exposed
    to an acute stressor prior to the behavioral tests. Rearing/climbing activity in a familiar environment
    (housing cage) increased at the end of the light and beginning of the dark phases in PS offspring
    compared to controls. PS per se did not appear to change anxiety-like behavior in either sex.However, exposure to an acute stressor increased exploratory behavior in control animals and,
    interestingly, PS blunted this effect. Relative and absolute numbers of rapid eye movement sleep
    bouts were higher in PS offspring. Moreover, exposure to an acute stressor induced a REM rebound
    effect in control animals but this compensatory mechanism was blunted in PS animals. Finally,
    depression-like behavioral changes assessed in the forced swim test was selectively induced in PS
    females. The central mechanisms mediating these differences may contribute to sex-specific
    sensitivity to stressors and depression propensity in humans.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    Publikationsdato2015
    Antal sider2
    StatusUdgivet - 2015
    BegivenhedAnnual Meeting of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society - Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
    Varighed: 2 jun. 20157 jun. 2015
    Konferencens nummer: 24

    Konference

    KonferenceAnnual Meeting of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society
    Nummer24
    Land/OmrådeCanada
    ByVictoria, British Columbia
    Periode02/06/201507/06/2015

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