AI Article Synopsis

  • Metabolic stressors, like food and water deprivation, can increase the likelihood of depression in animals exposed to chronic stress, impacting their sucrose consumption.
  • In an experiment, while 65% of stressed animals initially showed sucrose preference, those deprived of food and water experienced a notable decrease in both intake and preference.
  • The study also found that food deprivation triggered changes in certain stress-related hormones and inflammatory markers in the brain, highlighting the complex interaction between metabolic stress and chronic stress in inducing depression-like behaviors.

Article Abstract

There is growing evidence that metabolic stressors increase an organism's risk of depression. Chronic mild stress is a popular animal model of depression and several serendipitous findings have suggested that food deprivation prior to sucrose testing in this model is necessary to observe anhedonic behaviors. Here, we directly tested this hypothesis by exposing animals to chronic mild stress and used an overnight 2-bottle sucrose test (food ad libitum) on Day 5 and 10, then food and water deprive animals overnight and tested their sucrose consumption and preference in a 1-hr sucrose test the following morning. Approximately 65% of stressed animals consumed sucrose and showed a sucrose preference similar to nonstressed controls in an overnight sucrose test, and 35% showed a decrease in sucrose intake and preference. Following overnight food and water deprivation the previously "resilient" animals showed a significant decrease in sucrose preference and greatly reduced sucrose intake. In addition, we evaluated whether the onset of anhedonia following food and water deprivation corresponds to alterations in corticosterone, epinephrine, circulating glucose, or interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) expression in limbic brain areas. Although all stressed animals showed adrenal hypertrophy and elevated circulating epinephrine, only stressed animals that were food deprived were hypoglycemic compared with food-deprived controls. Additionally, food and water deprivation significantly increased hippocampus IL-1β while food and water deprivation only increased hypothalamus IL-1β in stress-susceptible animals. These data demonstrate that metabolic stress of food and water deprivation interacts with chronic stressor exposure to induce physiological and anhedonic responses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4501026PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/bne0000056DOI Listing

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