Metabolic, neuroendocrine and behavioral effects of social defeat in male and female mice using the chronic non-discriminatory social defeat stress model

Andrea Smith,Lindsay Hyland, Hiyam Al-Ansari, Bethany Watts,Zachary Silver, Longfei Wang, Miski Dahir, Aleyna Akgun,Andre Telfer,Alfonso Abizaid

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR(2023)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Stress-related disorders predominately affect females, yet preclinical models of chronic stress exclusively use males especially in models where social stressors are studied. Here, we implemented a 21-day novel social defeat paradigm in which a female and male C57 intruder are simultaneously placed in the cage of a territorial, resident CD-1 male mouse, and the resident proceeds to attack both intruders. Mice were given access to a regular laboratory diet, high in carbohydrates, and a palatable diet, high in fat. Chronic social defeat stress using this paradigm resulted in increased caloric intake in male and female mice, with the effects being more pronounced in females. We observed sex differences in high fat diet intake in response to stress, which was correlated with higher levels of plasma ghrelin observed in female mice but not male mice. Furthermore, females exposed to chronic stress displayed changes in growth hormone secretatogue receptor (ghsr) and neuropeptide-y (npy) expression in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, potentially increasing ghrelin sensitivity and inducing changes in diet choice and caloric intake. Behavioral results show that females tended to spend more time interacting during the social interaction test, compared to males who displayed higher vigilance towards the stranger mouse. Overall, our results highlight unique neurometabolic alterations in female mice in response to stress that is not present in male mice and may be important for coping with chronic stress and sustaining reproductive function.
更多
查看译文
关键词
social defeat,female mice,behavioral effects,stress,non-discriminatory
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要