Chronic Stress Shifts Effort-Related Choice Behavior in a Y-Maze Barrier Task in Mice.

J Vis Exp

Department of Psychology, Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience Area, The State University of New Jersey; Graduate Program in Neuroscience, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey;

Published: August 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic stress can lead to mood disorders like major depressive disorder, affecting motivation and effort to obtain rewards, as shown in studies using the Y-maze barrier task in mice.
  • The Y-maze task measures how much effort mice are willing to put in for different levels of food rewards, highlighting changes in motivation due to stress.
  • Current stress models primarily test male mice, but new techniques like chronic non-discriminatory social defeat stress (CNSDS) enable effective studies in both male and female mice, improving our understanding of stress-related mood disorders.*

Article Abstract

Mood disorders, including major depressive disorder, can be precipitated by chronic stress. The Y-maze barrier task is an effort-related choice test that measures motivation to expend effort and obtain reward. In mice, chronic stress exposure significantly impacts motivation to work for a higher value reward when a lesser value reward is freely available compared to unstressed mice. Here we describe the chronic corticosterone administration paradigm, which produces a shift in effortful responding in the Y-maze barrier task. In the Y-maze task, one arm contains 4 food pellets, while the other arm contains only 2 pellets. After mice learn to select the high reward arm, barriers with progressively increasing height are then introduced into the high reward arm over multiple test sessions. Unfortunately, most chronic stress paradigms (including corticosterone and social defeat) were developed in male mice and are less effective in female mice. Therefore, we also discuss chronic non-discriminatory social defeat stress (CNSDS), a stress paradigm we developed that is effective in both male and female mice. Repeating results with multiple distinct chronic stressors in male and female mice combined with increased usage of translationally relevant behavior tasks will help to advance the understanding of how chronic stress can precipitate mood disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7646533PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/61548DOI Listing

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