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Systemic immune activation leads to neuroinflammation and sickness behavior in mice.

Authors :
Biesmans S
Meert TF
Bouwknecht JA
Acton PD
Davoodi N
De Haes P
Kuijlaars J
Langlois X
Matthews LJ
Ver Donck L
Hellings N
Nuydens R
Source :
Mediators of inflammation [Mediators Inflamm] 2013; Vol. 2013, pp. 271359. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Jul 10.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Substantial evidence indicates an association between clinical depression and altered immune function. Systemic administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is commonly used to study inflammation-associated behavioral changes in rodents. In these experiments, we tested the hypothesis that peripheral immune activation leads to neuroinflammation and depressive-like behavior in mice. We report that systemic administration of LPS induced astrocyte activation in transgenic GFAP-luc mice and increased immunoreactivity against the microglial marker ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 in the dentate gyrus of wild-type mice. Furthermore, LPS treatment caused a strong but transient increase in cytokine levels in the serum and brain. In addition to studying LPS-induced neuroinflammation, we tested whether sickness could be separated from depressive-like behavior by evaluating LPS-treated mice in a panel of behavioral paradigms. Our behavioral data indicate that systemic LPS administration caused sickness and mild depressive-like behavior. However, due to the overlapping time course and mild effects on depression-related behavior per se, it was not possible to separate sickness from depressive-like behavior in the present rodent model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1466-1861
Volume :
2013
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Mediators of inflammation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23935246
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/271359