AI Article Synopsis

  • Nutritional and social challenges in early life are linked to mood disorders like depression, with disrupted norepinephrine (NE) systems implicated.
  • Rats with zinc deficiency or social isolation showed increased anxiety and depression behaviors individually, but combining both conditions surprisingly led to reduced anxiety and normalized depression-like behaviors.
  • The study reveals that while social isolation decreased NE levels, the combination with zinc deficiency altered NE system dynamics, suggesting complex interactions in mood regulation.

Article Abstract

Nutritional and social environmental problems during the early stages of life are closely associated with the pathophysiology of mood disorders such as depression. Disruption or dysfunction of the central norepinephrine (NE) system is also considered to play a role in mood disorders. Therefore, we evaluated the effects of zinc deficiency and/or social isolation on mood and changes in the central NE system using rats. Compared with the controls, the rats subjected to zinc deficiency or social isolation alone exhibited increased anxiety-related behavior in the elevated plus maze and greater depression-like behavior in the forced swim test. However, the co-occurrence of zinc deficiency and social isolation resulted in decreased anxiety-related behavior and control levels of depression-like behavior. Social isolation alone decreased the rats' cerebral NE concentrations. The expression of the NE transporter was not affected by social isolation alone, but its expression in the locus coeruleus was markedly decreased by the co-occurrence of social isolation and zinc deficiency, and this change was accompanied by an increase in the blood concentration of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol, which is a marker of central NE system activity. These findings suggest that zinc deficiency or social isolation alone induce anxious or depressive symptoms, but the presence of both conditions has anxiolytic or antidepressive effects. Furthermore, these opposing effects of mood-related behaviors were found to be associated with changes in the central NE system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2015.02.005DOI Listing

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