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A pilot study in modeling mood disorders in mice by chronic tail-suspension stress

Authors :
Chun-Sheng Ruan
Yue-Qin Zeng
Yi Guo
Larisa Bobrovskaya
Xin-Fu Zhou
Ruan, Chun-Sheng
Guo, Yi
Bobrovskaya, Larisa
Zhou, Xin-Fu
Zeng, Yue-Qin
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
UK : Future Medicine, 2018.

Abstract

Chronic stress has been known as a main cause for human mood disorders. The understanding of the pathogenesis of the mood disorders are primarily based on the usage of animal models.Low reproducibility and complicacy of production are commonly known shortcomings in the current models with chronic stress. Here, we tested a simple stress paradigm, daily exposure of 6-min tail-suspension (TS), in modelling chronic stress-induced mood disorders in mice. We found that after 2-3-weeks of TS stress mice displayed a significant decrease in exploratory behavior, increases in anxiety-like and depression-like behaviors as well as significant decreases of NeuN and GFAP levels in the hippocampus. We also found that longer exposure of mice to TS stress (up to 4 weeks) resulted in significant adaptation of these responses and reversal of most of the behavioural and biochemical changes. This study suggests that chronicTS stress for 2-3 weeks could be used as a model of mood disorders usc Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f1d05f104cc1ef4c03a2142f83f9c1b1