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Sexual behavior of male rats is well described type of appetitive behavior. This behavior is described by at least five independent factors: anticipatory, initiation, copulatory rate, hit rate and intromission count. Each factor has specific neuronal networks. The aim of our study was to analyze which factor is the most informative to describe sexual deficit in rats with depressive like syndrome. We investigate 6–8 month old WAG/Rij rats with absent epilepsy commodity with moderate depression and compare sexual behavior with control Crl:Han Wistar and Sprague-Dawley males. Sexually naïve WAG/Rij rats started to copulation less frequently (only 6 from 20 display mounting) compare to Crl:Han Wistar (6 from 6) and Sprague-Dawley (4 from 6). Sexually experienced WAG/Rij rats displayed longer mount latency (initiation factor) compare to both control strains. Surprisingly, sexually experienced WAG/Rij rats vocalized very intensively at 50-kHz band during five minutes before introduction of female. This anticipatory precontact vocalizations did not correlate with initiation of copulation. Latency to initiation of copulation (initiation factor) seems to be the most sensitive parameter describing depressive like syndrome during male rat sexual behavior and seems to be useful to investigation depressive disorders. It correspond to lower libido in men depressive patients.
Ketamine, phencyclidine and MK801 are uncompetitive NMDA receptor (NMDAR) antagonists which are used widely to model certain features of schizophrenia in rats. Systemic administration of NMDAR antagonists, in addition to provoking an increase in c-Fos expression, leads to important neurochemical and electrophysiological changes within the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Since the mPFC is considered to exert a top-down regulatory control of subcortical brain regions, we examined the effects of local infusion of the NMDAR antagonist, MK801, into the mPFC on the expression of c-Fos protein (widely used marker of neuronal activation) in several subcortical structures. The experiment was performed on freely moving rats, bilaterally implanted with guide cannulae in the prelimbic mPFC, infused with MK801 or saline. Bilateral administration of MK801 to the mPFC produced changes in the behavior (increased stereotypy and decreased sleep-like behavior) and complex changes in c-Fos protein expression with significant increases observed in the nucleus accumbens (core and shell), amygdala (basolateral and central nuclei), the CA1 field of the hippocampus, and mediodorsal and paraventricular thalamic nuclei, as compared to the saline group. Together, we demonstrate that blockade of NMDA receptors in the mPFC is sufficient to lead to behavioral abnormalities and increased c-Fos expression in many, but not all, of the subcortical structures examined. Our findings suggest that some of the behavioral abnormalities produced by uncompetitive NMDAR antagonists may result from aberrant activity in cortico-subcortical pathways. These data support an increasing body of literature, suggesting that the mPFC is an important site mediating the effects of NMDAR antagonists.
AIMS: Fluoxetine, a selective serotonine reuptake inhibitor, is commonly used to treat psychiatric disorders. Available data show that fluoxetine has limited side effects and, more importantly, may improve patient’s cognitive abilities. However, little is known about the mechanisms by which fluoxetine affects learning, especially appetitively motivated one. Thus, in the present project we investigated the effects of a long-term fluoxetine treatment on appetitively motivated discrimination learning. METHODS: We used fully automated behavioral assessment of discrimination learning in group-housed subjects, DI-staining for determining changes in morphology of dendritic spines and gel zymography for measurement of activity of MMP-9 (matrix metaloproteinase 9, an enzyme involved in synaptic plasticity). RESULTS: We showed that above-described learning is severely impaired in mice subjected to the long-term fluoxetine treatment. Since we have previously shown that such learning depends on MMP-9 activity in the central amygdala (CeA), we examined MMP-9 activity in the CeA of the fluoxetine treated mice. We found decreased MMP-9 level. Further, we tested fluoxetine influence on dendritic spine morphology in the CeA and observed that behavioral performance of the control wild type mice was highly correlated with a size and of mature, mushroom-shaped dendritic spines. No such correlation was found in MMP-9 knock out mice. Applied treatment abolished this correlation in wild type mice and did not reinstated it to a significant level in MMP-9 knock outs. CONCLUSIONS: Obtained results show that chronic fluoxetine treatment impairs appetitive discrimination learning in healthy controls, decreases MMP-9 activity and disrupts correlation between subjects’ performance in appetitive learning and structural synaptic plasticity in the CeA. The data shed light on dendritic spines’ dependent learning mechanisms, that may be disarrayed in the CeA by commonly applied fluoxetine treatment in patients.
As we found previously, ultrasonic vocalizations in the 50-kHz band emitted before a female is introduced into a copulatory chamber (precontact vocalizations – PVs) is useful parameter describing the rewarding value of socio-sexual contact in male rats. In the present experiments, we have investigated the influence of opioid receptors on PVs in sexually experienced rats. The behavioral effects of an i.p. injection of the opioid receptors antagonist – naltrexone were analyzed in six month old sexually experienced Wag/Rij (rats with genetic absence epilepsy) and Sprague-Dawley male rats. We found higher number of PVs in WAG/Rij compared to Sprague-Dawley males. Naltrexone (3 mg/kg) significantly diminished number PVs. Spectral analysis of PVs ultrasonic vocalizations did not detect significant changes in frequency of calls after physiological saline and naltrexone treatment. Opioid receptors are involved in PVs probably via changes in rewarding value of socio-sexual contacts. Our results have shown that rewarding system of Wag/Rij rats with absent epilepsy is sensitive to socio-sexual reward and seems to be even more sensitive that in Sprague-Dawley males.
Human studies demonstrate that women outperform men in standard tests of empathy. Recent data also suggest that women to a higher degree recruit mirror neuron-containing areas, which have been linked to processing of social emotional stimuli. However, it is not clear whether these differences are due to sex-specific mechanisms of empathy. Empathy, which in its simplest form can be defined as the capacity to be affected by the emotional state of a conspecific, is vital for survival, as it allows individuals to learn about potential danger from other members of their social group and thereby to adapt rapidly to environmental challenges. Viewed in this way, empathy is not a phenomenon limited to higher primates. With a goal of studying neural mechanisms of empathy, we have designed an animal model, in which a naive rat interacts with its cagemate, which was subjected to fear conditioning. We used this model of socially transferred fear to compare behavioral responses and pattern of neuronal activation in male and female rats. As multiple behavioral and molecular measures in females depend on current sex hormone levels, we also chose to monitor estrus cycle phase. We found that a brief interaction with a cagemate subjected to fear conditioning results in a robust activation of both medial and lateral divisions of central nucleus, as well as lateral and cortical nuclei of the amygdala and the prelimbic cortex in male rats. In female rats we found marked differences in c-Fos expression between estrus and diestrus. In diestrus, the activation patterns partially reflected the expression observed in males, whereas in estrus there were no significant differences between experimental groups. Collectively, our results support the existence of a neural circuit processing empathy. Moreover, our data show sex- and estrus cycle phase- specific activation patterns within the limbic system.
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