Abstract

The Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat is an established depression model characterized by elevated anxiety- and depression-like behavior across a variety of tests. Here we further characterized specific behavioral and functional domains relevant to depression that are altered in WKY rats. Moreover, since early-life experience potently shapes emotional behavior, we also determined whether aspects of WKYs' phenotype were modifiable by early-life factors using neonatal handling or maternal separation. We first compared WKYs' behavior to that of Sprague–Dawley (SD), Wistar, and Spontaneously Hypertensive (SHR) rats in: the open field test, elevated plus maze, novelty-suppressed feeding test, a social interaction test, and the forced swim test (FST). WKYs exhibited high baseline immobility in the FST and were the only strain to show increased immobility on FST Day 2 vs. Day 1 (an indicator of learned helplessness). WKYs also showed greater social avoidance, along with enlarged adrenal glands and hearts relative to other strains. We next tested whether neonatal handling or early-life maternal separation stress influenced WKYs' behavior. Neither manipulation affected their anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors, likely due to a strong genetic underpinning of their phenotype. Our findings indicate that WKY rats are a useful model that captures specific functional domains relevant to clinical depression including: psychomotor retardation, behavioral inhibition, learned helplessness, social withdrawal, and physiological dysfunction. WKY rats appear to be resistant to early-life manipulations (i.e., neonatal handling) that are therapeutic in other strains, and may be a useful model for the development of personalized anti-depressant therapies for treatment resistant depression.

Highlights

  • Depression and anxiety disorders are among the most common and burdensome health problems worldwide (Krishnan and Nestler, 2008; Nestler and Hyman, 2010)

  • On test day 2 when experimental animals encountered a novel male stimulus rat, WKY rats spent more time in the avoidance zone compared to the other strains [Figure 1C; main effect of strain: F(3, 44) = 2.919, p = 0.044; post-hoc p < 0.05 for WKY vs. Wistar], and visited the interaction zone the less often

  • The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) was the only strain that exhibited differential preference depending on the sex of the partners, showing less interaction with male than female partners and more avoidance from male than female partners

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Depression and anxiety disorders are among the most common and burdensome health problems worldwide (Krishnan and Nestler, 2008; Nestler and Hyman, 2010). A variety of rodent models of depression and anxiety have been proposed Many of these models include rats that exhibit either a natural susceptibility or resilience to stress, depressive- and/or anxiety-like behaviors (Armario et al, 1995; Hall et al, 2000; Shepard and Myers, 2008).

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call