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Effects of chronic silencing of relaxin-3 production in nucleus incertus neurons on food intake, body weight, anxiety-like behaviour and limbic brain activity in female rats.

Authors :
de Ávila, Camila
Chometton, Sandrine
Ma, Sherie
Pedersen, Lola Torz
Timofeeva, Elena
Cifani, Carlo
Gundlach, Andrew L.
Source :
Psychopharmacology; Apr2020, Vol. 237 Issue 4, p1091-1106, 16p, 1 Illustration, 1 Chart, 5 Graphs
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Eating disorders are frequently triggered by stress and are more prevalent in women than men. First signs often appear during early adolescence, but the biological basis for the sex-specific differences is unknown. Central administration of native relaxin-3 (RLN3) peptide or chimeric/truncated analogues produces differential effects on food intake and HPA axis activity in adult male and female rats, but the precise role of endogenous RLN3 signalling in metabolic and neuroendocrine control is unclear. Therefore, we examined the effects of microRNA-induced depletion (knock-down) of RLN3 mRNA/(peptide) production in neurons of the brainstem nucleus incertus (NI) in female rats on a range of physiological, behavioural and neurochemical indices, including food intake, body weight, anxiety, plasma corticosterone, mRNA levels of key neuropeptides in the paraventricular nucleus of hypothalamus (PVN) and limbic neural activity patterns (reflected by c-fos mRNA). Validated depletion of RLN3 in NI neurons of female rats (n = 8) produced a small, sustained (~ 2%) decrease in body weight, an imbalance in food intake and an increase in anxiety-like behaviour in the large open field, but not in the elevated plus-maze or light/dark box. Furthermore, NI RLN3 depletion disrupted corticosterone regulation, increased oxytocin and arginine-vasopressin, but not corticotropin-releasing factor, mRNA, in PVN, and decreased basal levels of c-fos mRNA in parvocellular and magnocellular PVN, bed nucleus of stria terminalis and the lateral hypothalamic area, brain regions involved in stress and feeding. These findings support a role for NI RLN3 neurons in fine-tuning stress and neuroendocrine responses and food intake regulation in female rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00333158
Volume :
237
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Psychopharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142512572
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-019-05439-1