Abstract

Social experiences can have profound effects on an individual’s level of anxiety. While various studies have addressed consequences of experiences of a specific type, e.g., social defeat, a recent study in mice investigated the impact of combinations of adverse and beneficial social experiences. Quite surprisingly, mice exposed to benefits during early life phases followed by escapable adversity in adulthood displayed lowest levels of anxiety, even compared to individuals having experienced throughout beneficial conditions. The present study aimed to elucidate whether this phenomenon is restricted to these specific life phases or whether it also exists when all these experiences are made in full adulthood. For this purpose, we compared anxiety-like behavior and stress response of adult male mice exposed to escapable social defeat following beneficial social experiences to that of mice exposed to either throughout adverse or throughout beneficial conditions. More precisely, we performed three established behavioral paradigms measuring anxiety-like behavior and assessed corticosterone metabolites non-invasively via feces sampling. Interestingly, we found no effects of social experience on anxiety-like behavior. In contrast to that, the animals’ stress hormone levels were profoundly affected by current social conditions: escapable social defeat (adverse condition) led to an increase in corticosterone metabolite concentrations, whereas living with a female (beneficial condition) led to a decrease. Thus, on the one hand this study suggests the importance of the timing of social experience for affecting an individual’s level of anxiety. On the other hand, it demonstrates that anxiety and stress hormone levels can be affected separately by social experience during adulthood.

Highlights

  • Anxiety is a fundamental emotion of all vertebrates that can increase an individual’s chance of survival in dangerous situations (Marks and Nesse, 1994)

  • Irrespective of profound differences in previous social experiences (AA: throughout adversity, BA: benefits followed by adversity, BB: throughout benefits), mice of the three groups did not differ significantly concerning anxiety-like behavior in any of the six parameters measured in three tests (EPM, rel. open arm entries: F(2,32) = 2.282, p = 0.141; ηp2 = 0.115; Elevated Plus Maze (EPM), rel. open arm time, F(2,32) = 1.599, p = 0.218, ηp2 = 0.091; Dark Light (DL), light compartment latency: F(2,32) = 0.818, p = 0.450, ηp2 = 0.049; DL, light compartment time: F(2,32) = 1.581, p = 0.221, ηp2 = 0.090; OF, center entries: F(2,32) = 0.601, p = 0.554, ηp2 = 0.036; OF, center time: F(2,32) = 0.086, p = 0.918, ηp2 = 0.005; Figure 3)

  • This difference resulted from a change in fecal corticosterone metabolites (FCM) concentrations depending on social experience during phase 2 (FCM2 vs. FCM3): escapable social defeat led to a significant increase in FCM concentrations (AA: p = 0.018; BA: p = 0.005), whereas living with a female led to a significant decrease (BB: p = 0.002)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Anxiety is a fundamental emotion of all vertebrates that can increase an individual’s chance of survival in dangerous situations (Marks and Nesse, 1994). Effects of Adult Social Experiences of specific types of experience. These can be as diverse as for example high or low levels of maternal care (Liu et al, 1997; Caldji et al, 1998; Meaney, 2001), agonistic social encounters (Rodgers and Cole, 1993; Jansen et al, 2010; Kloke et al, 2011) or sexual interaction (Rodríguez-Manzo et al, 1999; Aikey et al, 2002; Edinger and Frye, 2007; Kästner et al, 2015). Adverse and stressful social experiences, i.e., events that lead to an increase of glucocorticoid concentrations, have been linked to enhanced anxiety (Blanchard et al, 2001; Barik et al, 2013). The mechanisms concerning the relation between stress hormones and anxiety remain far from being understood (McEwen, 2013; Raglan et al, 2017)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
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