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Engrailed 2 deficiency and chronic stress alter avoidance and motivation behaviors

Authors :
Tonia T. Liu
Neeharika Patibanda
Benjamin Adam Samuels
Emanuel DiCicco-Bloom
Mallory S. Vollbrecht
Nikita Jadav
Jenny Dang
Mimi L. Phan
Mark H. Mansour
Won S. Kim
Ivana Nikodijevic
Xiaofeng Zhou
Gopna Shekaran
Robert C. Reisler
Source :
Behavioural brain research. 413
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a pervasive neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impairments in social interaction, cognition, and communication, as well as the presence of repetitive or stereotyped behaviors and interests. ASD is most often studied as a neurodevelopmental disease, but it is a lifelong disorder. Adults with ASD experience more stressful life events and greater perceived stress, and frequently have comorbid mood disorders such as anxiety and depression. It remains unclear whether adult exposure to chronic stress can exacerbate the behavioral and neurodevelopmental phenotypes associated with ASD. To address this issue, we first investigated whether adult male and female Engrailed-2 deficient (En2-KO, En2-/-) mice, which display behavioral disturbances in avoidance tasks and dysregulated monoaminergic neurotransmitter levels, also display impairments in instrumental behaviors associated with motivation, such as the progressive ratio task. We then exposed adult En2-KO mice to chronic environmental stress (CSDS, chronic social defeat stress), to determine if stress exacerbated the behavioral and neuroanatomical effects of En2 deletion. En2-/- mice showed impaired instrumental acquisition and significantly lower breakpoints in a progressive ratio test, demonstrating En2 deficiency decreases motivation to exert effort for reward. Furthermore, adult CSDS exposure increased avoidance behaviors in En2-KO mice. Interestingly, adult CSDS exposure also exacerbated the deleterious effects of En2 deficiency on forebrain-projecting monoaminergic fibers. Our findings thus suggest that adult exposure to stress may exacerbate behavioral and neuroanatomical phenotypes associated with developmental effects of genetic En2 deficiency.

Details

ISSN :
18727549
Volume :
413
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavioural brain research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3cd6b170e65d6def0705e908c195c448