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Chronic restraint stress impairs voluntary wheel running but has no effect on food-motivated behavior in mice. | LitMetric

Chronic restraint stress is known to cause significant alterations of mitochondrial biology. However, its effects on effort-based behavior and the sensitivity of these effects to treatments that restore mitochondrial function have not been assessed. Based on the hypothesis that the behavioral consequences of this stressor should be more severe for an energy demanding activity than for an energy procuring activity, we compared the effects of chronic restraint stress on the performance of male mice trained to use a running wheel or to nose poke for a food reward in an operant conditioning cage. In accordance with our hypothesis, we observed that exposure of mice to 2-hour daily restraint sessions for 14 to 16 days during the light phase of the cycle reliably decreased voluntary wheel running but had no effect on working for food in a fixed ratio 10 schedule of food reinforcement or in a progressive ratio schedule of food reinforcement. This dissociation between the two types of behavioral activities could reflect an adaptive response to the constraint imposed by chronic restraint stress on mitochondria function and its negative consequences on energy metabolism. To determine whether it is the case, we administered mesenchymal stem cells intranasally to chronically restrained mice to repair the putative mitochondrial dysfunction induced by chronic restraint stress. This intervention had no effect on wheel running deficits. Assessment of mitochondrial gene expression in the brain of mice submitted to chronic restraint stress revealed an increase in the expression of genes involved in mitochondrial biology that showed habituation with repetition of daily sessions of restraint stress. These original findings can be interpreted to indicate that chronic restraint stress induces behavioral and mitochondrial adjustments that contribute to metabolic adaptation to this stressor and maintain metabolic flexibility.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9729455PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2022.10.017DOI Listing

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