1. The effect of unpredictable chronic mild stress on depressive-like behavior and on hippocampal A1 and striatal A2A adenosine receptors
- Author
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Régis Gemerasca Mestriner, Carla Dalmaz, Juliana Bender Hoppe, Leonardo Machado Crema, Letícia Ferreira Pettenuzzo, Luisa Amalia Diehl, Daniela Pereira Laureano, Michele Schlabitz, Christianne Gazzana Salbego, and Deusa Vendite
- Subjects
Male ,Sucrose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Receptor, Adenosine A2A ,Adenosine Deaminase ,Hippocampus ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Striatum ,In Vitro Techniques ,Tritium ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Purinergic Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Adenosine receptor binding ,Chronic stress ,Rats, Wistar ,Receptor ,Swimming ,Analysis of Variance ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Depression ,Receptor, Adenosine A1 ,Chemistry ,Adenosine ,Adenosine receptor ,Corpus Striatum ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,Sweetening Agents ,Xanthines ,Stress, Psychological ,Protein Binding ,Behavioural despair test ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study examined the effects of two chronic stress regimens upon depressive-like behavior, A(1) and A(2A) adenosine receptor binding and immunocontent. Male rats were subjected to unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS) or to chronic restraint stress (CRS) for 40 days. Subsequently, depressive-like behaviors (forced swimming and consumption of sucrose) were evaluated, and A(1) adenosine or A(2A) adenosine receptors were examined in the hippocampus or striatum, respectively. UCMS animals demonstrated depressive-related behaviors (decrease in sucrose consumption and increased immobility in the forced swimming test). This group also presented increased A(1) adenosine receptor binding and immunoreactivity in hippocampus, as well as increased striatal A(2A) adenosine receptor binding in the striatum, without alteration in immunoreactivity. Conversely, the chronic restraint stress group displayed only an increase in A(1) adenosine receptor binding and no alteration in the other parameters evaluated. We suggest that the alteration in adenosine receptors, particularly the upregulation of striatal A(2A) adenosine receptors following UCMS, could be associated with depressive-related behavior.
- Published
- 2013
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