Abstract

Psychosocial stress-induced depressive behavior is linked to the etiology of several neurological diseases viz., PTSD, and neurodegenerative disease like Alzheimer's Disease (AD). The repeated bouts of social stress defeat can be induced using Resident-Intruder- Paradigm (RIP) and Chronic Mild Social Stress (CMSS) animal models to assess the stress-induced depressive behavioral patterns. The aim of this study to examine the anti-depressive efficacy of 3-methoxythietane- 1,1-dioxide (N-14) in RIP models of behavioral alterations. In this study, we have used Sprague-Dawley rats in Resident-Intruder-Paradigm (RIP), where intruders interacted with residents Day 0 to Day +5 for 10 minutes to invoke CMSS in intruders and became defeated/submissive rats due to the depressive-like behavioral alterations in social activity, explorations, grooming, defense, aggressive behavior, social interaction, freeze, rearing etc., with residents. Control intact animals are included in group I, group II received N-14 alone; group III received CMSS, and group IV received cotreatment of N14 with CMSS. N-14 (2 mg/kg) was administered intraperitoneally from Day 0 to Day +5 to intact animals and intruder animals under conditions of CMSS. Several behavioral tests viz., forced swim test, open field test, and elevated-plus maze test were used to examine the above behavioral dynamic parameters. The dynamic interaction between Residents and Intruders during the study showed substantial alterations in exploratory activity, aggressiveness, defensive behavior, body weight, and thymus mass in stressed animals. N-14 cotreatment has mitigated sociability, exploratory activity, aggressiveness increased social adaptability and defensive behavior. An extensive rise in active forms of defense and submission latency indicates that N-14 has induced antidepressant activity with a psycho-sedative component of action. Serendipitously, we observed the ameliorative capability of N-14 cotreatment to mitigate depressive-behavioral symptoms in intruders.

Highlights

  • Psychosocial stress-induced depressive behavior is linked to etiology of several neurological diseases viz., PTSD, and neurodegenerative disease like Alzheimer’s disease (AD)

  • N-14 cotreatment induced behavioral alterations related to Social Interaction, Social Exploration etc., Social Interaction is associated with inclusive actions of Fight and Attack

  • The Attack pattern was reduced 4.1–15.8 times on all days of the experiment, with statistical significance on Day 0 compared to Group III

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Summary

Introduction

Psychosocial stress-induced depressive behavior is linked to etiology of several neurological diseases viz., PTSD, and neurodegenerative disease like Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Alzheimer’s disease is associated with dementia constituted by the cognitive decline and functional impairment of neuropsychiatric functions. This disorder currently affecting 5.6 million Americans aged 65 years and the figure is estimated to increase nearly 16 million by 2050. The comorbid neuropsychitatirc symptoms (NPS) associated with AD affects daily living, quality of life [1, 2] These symptoms are leading to the accelerated disease progression, and mortality [3, 4]. A plethora of studies from clinical setting reported the MCI in AD patients with a rapid, extensive cognitive decline than the non-depressed AD patients [13]. A study reported that 16% of AD patient exhibited depression in a population-based study whereas the 44% of AD patients have attained depression in a hospital-based study; these are indicating depression as an early manifestation of AD [17, 18]

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