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Postnatal exposure to fluoxetine led to cognitive-emotional alterations and decreased parvalbumin positive neurons in the hippocampus of juvenile Wistar rats

Authors :
Regina H. Silva
Alessandra Mussi Ribeiro
Luiz Eduardo Mateus Brandão
Alvaro da Costa Lima
Jeferson S. Cavalcante
Ywlliane da Silva Rodrigues Meurer
Ramón H. Lima
Antônio Carlos Q. Aquino
Clarissa Loureiro das Chagas Campêlo
Rovena C.G.J. Engelberth
Sara Sophia Guedes Linhares
Diana Aline Nôga
Source :
International journal of developmental neuroscience : the official journal of the International Society for Developmental NeuroscienceREFERENCES. 81(7)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The exposure to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) during development results in behavioural impairment in adulthood in humans and animal models. Indeed, serotonergic overexpression in early life leads to structural and functional changes in brain circuits that control cognition and emotion. However, the effects of developmental exposure to these substances on the behaviour of adolescent rats are conflicting and remain poorly characterised. We performed a behavioural screening to investigate the effects of postnatal exposure to fluoxetine on memory and behaviours related to anxiety, anhedonia, and depression, as well we evaluate the parvalbumin expression in hippocampus of juvenile (~PND45) female and male rats. Fluoxetine (daily 20 mg/kg s.c. injections from PND7-PND21)- or vehicle-treated adolescent rats went through several behavioural tasks (from PND 38 to PND52) and were subject to transcardial perfusion and brain removal for immunohistochemical analysis (PND53). We found that postnatal exposure to fluoxetine increased anxiety- and depression-like behaviours in the open field and sucrose preference and forced swimming tests, respectively. In addition, this treatment induced working memory and short-term (but not long-term) recognition memory impairments, and reduced parvalbumin-positive interneurons in the hippocampus. In addition, the results revealed developmental sex-dependent effects of fluoxetine postnatal treatment on adolescent rats' behaviour. These outcomes indicate that affective disorders and mnemonic alterations caused by SSRIs perinatal exposure can be present at adolescence.

Details

ISSN :
1873474X
Volume :
81
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of developmental neuroscience : the official journal of the International Society for Developmental NeuroscienceREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....407221e8b91d245a8da8b4de5ff02b20