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Multiple integrated social stress induces depressive-like behavioral and neural adaptations in female C57BL/6J mice.

Authors :
Zhai, Xiaojing
Ai, Lin
Chen, Dandan
Zhou, Dongyu
Han, Yi
Ji, Ran
Hu, Mengfan
Wang, Qing
Zhang, Moruo
Wang, Yuxin
Zhang, Chunyan
Yang, Jun-Xia
Hu, Ankang
Liu, He
Cao, Jun-Li
Zhang, Hongxing
Source :
Neurobiology of Disease. Jan2024, Vol. 190, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Despite women representing most of those affected by major depression, preclinical studies have focused almost exclusively on male subjects, partially due to a lack of ideal animal paradigms. As the persistent need regarding the sex balance of neuroscience research and female-specific pathology of mental disorders surges, the establishment of natural etiology-based and systematically validated animal paradigms for depression with female subjects becomes an urgent scientific problem. This study aims to establish, characterize, and validate a "Multiple Integrated Social Stress (MISS)" model of depression in female C57BL/6J mice by manipulating and integrating daily social stressors that females are experiencing. Female C57BL/6J mice randomly experienced social competition failure in tube test, modified vicarious social defeat stress, unescapable overcrowding stress followed by social isolation on each day, for ten consecutive days. Compared with their controls, female MISS mice exhibited a relatively decreased preference for social interaction and sucrose, along with increased immobility in the tail suspension test, which could last for at least one month. These MISS mice also exhibited increased levels of blood serum corticosterone, interleukin-6 L and 1β. In the pharmacological experiment, MISS-induced dysfunctions in social interaction, sucrose preference, and tail suspension tests were amended by systematically administrating a single dose of sub-anesthetic ketamine, a rapid-onset antidepressant. Compared with controls, MISS females exhibited decreased c-Fos activation in their anterior cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens and some other depression-related brain regions. Furthermore, 24 h after the last exposure to the paradigm, MISS mice demonstrated a decreased center zone time in the open field test and decreased open arm time in the elevated plus-maze test, indicating anxiety-like behavioral phenotypes. Interestingly, MISS mice developed an excessive nesting ability, suggesting a likely behavioral phenotype of obsessive-compulsive disorder. These data showed that the MISS paradigm was sufficient to generate pathological profiles in female mice to mimic core symptoms, serum biochemistry and neural adaptations of depression in clinical patients. The present study offers a multiple integrated natural etiology-based animal model tool for studying female stress susceptibility. [Display omitted] • Female MISS mice developed core symptoms of depression. • Female MISS mice exhibited depressive-like hormonal and molecular maladaptations. • MISS-related depressive-like changes could be reversed by ketamine. • Depression-related key brain regions were inhibited in female MISS mice. • Female MISS mice had anxiety- and obsessive-compulsive disorder-like symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09699961
Volume :
190
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neurobiology of Disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174605993
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2023.106374