Abstract

Mild stress exposure contributes to the development of cognitive and emotional deficits, is considered as a model of depressive state, and is characterized by enhanced NO production. In albino mature (12-month-old) male rats, the depressive state was simulated by daily 30-min exposure to stressful stimuli (vibration, loud sound, and strobe light) over 7 days in a special chamber. On paraffin frontal sections of the brain stained with antibodies against inducible NO synthase (iNOS), the expression and distribution pattern of immunoreactive material were evaluated in various layers of the dentate gyrus under normal conditions and after depression modeling. The relative area of iNOS expression in the dentate gyrus of control rats was 8.2 (7.1-9.9)%, while in rats with experimental depression, this parameter was 16.7 (10.5-22.1)%, i.e. increased by 8.5% (p<0.05). In mature rats with modeled depressive state, the expression and relative area of iNOS expression in neuronal perikarya in the granular and subgranular layers of the dentate gyrus increased, which can underlie the mechanisms of damage and determine reduced neuroplasticity and suppressed neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus in rats during adulthood.

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