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Dominance status alters restraint-induced neural activity in brain regions controlling stress vulnerability
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Understanding the cellular mechanisms that control resistance and vulnerability to stress is an important step toward identifying novel targets for the prevention and treatment of stress-related mental illness. In Syrian hamsters, dominant and subordinate animals exhibit different behavioral and physiological responses to social defeat stress, with dominants showing stress resistance and subordinates showing stress vulnerability. We previously found that dominant and subordinate hamsters show different levels of defeat-induced neural activity in brain regions that modulate coping with stress, although the extent to which status-dependent differences in stress vulnerability generalize to non-social stressors is unknown. In this study, dominant, subordinate, and control male Syrian hamsters were exposed to acute physical restraint for 30 minutes and restraint-induced c-Fos immunoreactivity was quantified in select brain regions. Subordinate animals showed less restraint-induced c-Fos immunoreactivity in the infralimbic (IL), prelimbic (PL), and ventral medial amygdala (vMeA) compared to dominants, which is consistent with the status-dependent effects of social defeat stress. Subordinate animals did not show increased c-Fos immunoreactivity in the rostroventral dorsal raphe nucleus (rvDRN), which is in contrast to the effects of social defeat stress. These findings indicate that status-dependent changes in neural activity generalize from one stressor to another in a brain region-dependent manner. These findings further suggest that while some neural circuits may support a generalized form of stress resistance, others may provide resistance to specific stressors.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Dominance-Subordination
Male
Restraint, Physical
Coping (psychology)
Hydrocortisone
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Anxiety
Amygdala
Article
Developmental psychology
Social defeat
03 medical and health sciences
Behavioral Neuroscience
Neural activity
Random Allocation
0302 clinical medicine
Dorsal raphe nucleus
Biological neural network
medicine
Animals
Mesocricetus
Stressor
Brain
Resilience, Psychological
Immunohistochemistry
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
medicine.symptom
Psychology
Neuroscience
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Stress, Psychological
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....781a459741983915464aff8c08035aba