Abstract

IntroductionWe have shown in previous work that acute episodes of predator exposure occurring in the context of chronic social instability produced PTSD‐like sequelae in rats. Our animal model of PTSD contained two components: (1) acute trauma, immobilization of rats in close proximity to a cat twice in 10 days, and (2) chronic social instability, 31 days of randomized housing of cage cohorts. Here we tested the hypothesis that daily social stimulation would block the development of the PTSD‐like sequelae.MethodsBeginning 24 h after the first cat exposure, adult male rats were given our established PTSD model, alone or in conjunction with daily social stimulation, in which all rats within a group interacted in a large apparatus for 2 h each day for the final 30 days of the PTSD regimen. All behavioral, for example, anxiety, memory, startle testing, and physiological assessments, for example, body growth, organ weights, and corticosterone levels, took place following completion of the psychosocial stress period.ResultsDaily social stimulation blocked the expression of a subset of PTSD‐like effects, including predator‐based cued fear conditioning, enhanced startle response, heightened anxiety on the elevated plus maze and the stress‐induced suppression of growth rate. We also found that social stimulation and psychosocial stress produced equivalent outcomes in some measures, including adrenal and heart hypertrophy, thymus atrophy, and a reduction in poststress corticosterone levels.ConclusionsDaily exposure of rats to a highly social environment blocked the development of a subset of trauma‐induced sequelae, particularly fear‐related outcomes. It is notable that daily social stimulation normalized a subset, but not all, of the PTSD‐like effects. We discuss our findings in the context of the literature demonstrating that social stimulation can counteract the adverse effects of traumatic stress on behavioral and physiological measures, as well as to produce its own stress‐like outcomes.

Highlights

  • We have shown in previous work that acute episodes of predator exposure occurring in the context of chronic social instability produced PTSDlike sequelae in rats

  • For cued fear assessed during the 3-min period prior to the tone, there were no significant main effects of stress model of PTSD (Stress) or Social and no significant Stress 9 Social interaction indicating that all four groups exhibited similar immobility levels prior to tone presentation

  • We have investigated the influence of daily social stimulation on the expression of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-like effects in adult rats exposed to chronic psychosocial stress

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Summary

Introduction

We have shown in previous work that acute episodes of predator exposure occurring in the context of chronic social instability produced PTSDlike sequelae in rats. Results: Daily social stimulation blocked the expression of a subset of PTSD-like effects, including predator-based cued fear conditioning, enhanced startle response, heightened anxiety on the elevated plus maze and the stress-induced suppression of growth rate. Our group and others have demonstrated that acute predator exposure, with an obligate social instability component, produced PTSD-like sequelae in rats, including a persistent traumatic memory, hypervigilance, heightened anxiety, memory impairment for new information, and neurotransmitter and hormonal abnormalities (Zoladz et al 2008, 2012, 2013; Daskalakis et al 2013; Wilson et al 2013, 2014).

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