Strain and Gender Specific Effects in the Forced Swim Test: Effects of Previous Stress Exposure
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Stress
- Vol. 6 (4) , 269-280
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10253890310001602829
Abstract
The chronic mild stress (CMS) procedure was developed in rodents to target anhedonia, the core symptom of depressive melancholia. Stress exposure has been shown to induce a variety of physiological, biochemical and behavioral alterations associated with depression, although its anhedonic consequences as indexed by either sucrose intake and preference or thresholds for brain stimulation reward are less reliably observed. In the present study, we assessed the effects of six weeks of CMS on the latter measure in two strains of male and female rats subsequently challenged with an acute psychophysical stressor, forced swimming; their behavior in the swimming cylinder was evaluated on two consecutive days. While brain stimulation reward thresholds and response rates were unchanged by CMS exposure, significant differences in forced swim behaviors were observed between male control and CMS groups. In particular, male Long Evans rats with a history of CMS showed the largest decrease in the duration of active behaviors on the second test day, a pattern less evident in the Sprague-Dawley strain of rats, or in any of the female groups. The results suggest that the effects of depressogenic manipulations are strain and gender dependent, with male Long Evans rats most susceptible, as demonstrated by the selective reduction of struggling behaviors. Inclusion of multiple measures, including the forced swim test, would provide a better understanding of the psychopathological profile engendered by chronic exposure to mild stressors and its genetic specificity.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE EFFECTS OF STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS ON DEPRESSIONAnnual Review of Psychology, 1997
- Detection of serotonergic and noradrenergic antidepressants in the rat forced swimming test: the effects of water depthBehavioural Brain Research, 1995
- Circannual changes in the duration of the immobility response of rats in the forced swim testPhysiology & Behavior, 1995
- Sucrose consumption as an hedonic measure following chronic unpredictable mild stressPhysiology & Behavior, 1995
- Effects of maternal stress during pregnancy on forced swimming test behavior of the offspringPhysiology & Behavior, 1991
- Opposite effects of diazepam and β-CCE on immobility and straw-climbing behavior of rats in a modified forced-swim testPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1989
- Effect of Chronic Administration of Antidepressants on Duration of Immobility in Rats Forced to SwimThe Japanese Journal of Pharmacology, 1986
- A constant-current stimulatorPhysiology & Behavior, 1980
- Self-stimulation in the rat: Quantitative characteristics of the reward pathway.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1978
- Depression: a new animal model sensitive to antidepressant treatmentsNature, 1977