Abstract
Major depression is a common, serious and recurrent disorder that affects 17-20% of the population of the world. The chronic mild stress (CMS) model has been used as an animal model of depression but reflect anhedonia in animals. Present study investigated behavioral, physiological and neurochemical aspects of rats exposed to a CMS procedure. The consumption of sweet food, locomotor activity, body and adrenal gland weight, BDNF protein levels evaluated in hippocampus, cerebrospinal fluid and serum were assessed in rats. Our findings demonstrated decreased in sweet food intake, increase of adrenal gland weight and a decrease of body weight and no changes were observed in BDNF protein levels in serum, cerebrospinal fluid and hippocampus in rats subjected to CMS procedure. Indeed, locomotor activity was not significantly affected. In conclusion, these data reveal that BDNF protein levels were not significantly correlated with the decrease of sweet food consumption observed in CMS exposed animals.
Keywords: Anhedonia, depression, BDNF protein levels, chronic mild stress, mood disorder, animal model
Current Neurovascular Research
Title: Chronic Mild Stress Paradigm Reduces Sweet Food Intake in Rats without Affecting Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor Protein Levels
Volume: 5 Issue: 4
Author(s): Giancarlo Lucca, Clarissa M. Comim, Samira S. Valvassori, Josimar G. Pereira, Laura Stertz, Elaine C. Gavioli, Flavio Kapczinski and Joao Quevedo
Affiliation:
Keywords: Anhedonia, depression, BDNF protein levels, chronic mild stress, mood disorder, animal model
Abstract: Major depression is a common, serious and recurrent disorder that affects 17-20% of the population of the world. The chronic mild stress (CMS) model has been used as an animal model of depression but reflect anhedonia in animals. Present study investigated behavioral, physiological and neurochemical aspects of rats exposed to a CMS procedure. The consumption of sweet food, locomotor activity, body and adrenal gland weight, BDNF protein levels evaluated in hippocampus, cerebrospinal fluid and serum were assessed in rats. Our findings demonstrated decreased in sweet food intake, increase of adrenal gland weight and a decrease of body weight and no changes were observed in BDNF protein levels in serum, cerebrospinal fluid and hippocampus in rats subjected to CMS procedure. Indeed, locomotor activity was not significantly affected. In conclusion, these data reveal that BDNF protein levels were not significantly correlated with the decrease of sweet food consumption observed in CMS exposed animals.
Export Options
About this article
Cite this article as:
Lucca Giancarlo, Comim M. Clarissa, Valvassori S. Samira, Pereira G. Josimar, Stertz Laura, Gavioli C. Elaine, Kapczinski Flavio and Quevedo Joao, Chronic Mild Stress Paradigm Reduces Sweet Food Intake in Rats without Affecting Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor Protein Levels, Current Neurovascular Research 2008; 5 (4) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/156720208786413406
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/156720208786413406 |
Print ISSN 1567-2026 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1875-5739 |
- Author Guidelines
- Graphical Abstracts
- Fabricating and Stating False Information
- Research Misconduct
- Post Publication Discussions and Corrections
- Publishing Ethics and Rectitude
- Increase Visibility of Your Article
- Archiving Policies
- Peer Review Workflow
- Order Your Article Before Print
- Promote Your Article
- Manuscript Transfer Facility
- Editorial Policies
- Allegations from Whistleblowers
Related Articles
-
Carotid Ultrasound in One, Two and Three Dimensions
Vascular Disease Prevention (Discontinued) Epigenetic Basis of Individual Variability to Major Psychosis
Current Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Medicine Dendritic Cells: A Double-Edge Sword in Atherosclerotic Inflammation
Current Pharmaceutical Design Emerging Roles for Vasoactive Peptides in Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategies Against Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Diseases
Current Protein & Peptide Science Current and Future Clinical Strategies in Colon Cancer Prevention and the Emerging Role of Chemoprevention
Current Pharmaceutical Design Post-cardiac Arrest Syndrome in Children
Current Pediatric Reviews Type 2 Diabetes and Risk for Functional Decline and Disability in Older Persons
Current Diabetes Reviews The Perils, Pitfalls and Opportunities of Using High Sensitivity Cardiac Troponin
Current Medicinal Chemistry Dietary Carbohydrates - Requirement and Recommendation in the Human Diet
Current Nutrition & Food Science MicroRNAs in Cancer Therapy: From Bench to Bedside
Current Cancer Therapy Reviews Cardiovascular Effects of Current and Future Anti-Obesity Drugs
Current Vascular Pharmacology Chaperones and Cardiac Misfolding Protein Diseases
Current Protein & Peptide Science Glycoconjugates of Quinolines: Application in Medicinal Chemistry
Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry Cellular Iron Homeostasis and Therapeutic Implications of Iron Chelators in Cancer
Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology Atrial Fibrillation During or After TAVI: Incidence, Implications and Therapeutical Considerations
Current Pharmaceutical Design Estrogen Receptors as Targets for Drug Development for Breast Cancer, Osteoporosis and Cardiovascular Diseases
Current Cancer Drug Targets The Cost-Effectiveness of Palivizumab in the Prevention of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Bronchiolitis: A Systematic Review
Current Respiratory Medicine Reviews Vitamin, Mineral, and Drug Absorption Following Bariatric Surgery
Current Drug Metabolism Genetic Aspects of Lone Atrial Fibrillation: What Do We Know?
Current Pharmaceutical Design Antiangiogenic Resistance and Cancer Metabolism: Opportunities for Synthetic Lethality
Current Drug Targets