Behavioural lateralisation, which has been postulated to be an individual personality trait, is related to the activity of various physiological systems including the immune system. As lateralisation has been related to anxiety, which is known to influence immune reactivity, it can be hypothesized that the relation between lateralisation and immune reactivity involves individual behavioural patterns as they appear in exploratory-based anxiety models. In order to answer this question, a behavioural investigation focussing on exploratory activity was undertaken in male and female C3H mice previously selected for their paw preference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe functional capabilities of dopamine neuron-rich grafts implanted into the accumbens and striatal regions in neonatal rats were evaluated in a series of behavioural tests. The ascending mesotelencephalic dopaminergic system of three-day-old rat pups was bilaterally lesioned by injecting 6-hydroxydopamine at the level of the lateral hypothalamus. Five days later a suspension containing dopaminergic neurons obtained from embryonic day 14 mesencephali was injected bilaterally into the striatal complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocal lesion of the dopaminergic (DA) terminals of the nucleus accumbens have been described to reproduce part of the behavioral deficits evoked by the lesion of the whole mesocorticolimbic DA system. The most straightforward interpretation of these results would be that the DA innervation of the nucleus accumbens is necessary for and critically involved in the normal performance of the given behaviors. However, while giving some indication as to the necessity of the integrity of this DA innervation for normal behaviors, such an approach cannot reveal whether the presence of the DA innervation of other mesocorticolimbic areas (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present study the long-term evolution of behavioral deficits following a local lesion of the dopaminergic innervation of the nucleus accumbens with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was compared in two groups of rats: lesioned animals and animals bearing a dopaminergic implant in the nucleus accumbens. Lesioned animals gradually recovered on various behavioral tests (amphetamine-induced locomotion, exploration, hoarding) and were indistinguishable from the control group on most parameters by 10 months postlesion. The deficits were, however, reinstated by a second intra-accumbens 6-OHDA lesion, a finding which suggests a role for dopaminergic reinnervation in the observed recovery.
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