Mild postnatal manipulation reduces proenkephalin mRNA in the striatum in developing mice and increases morphine conditioned place preference in adulthood.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
Stressful events during certain neonatal periods may increase the vulnerability of an individual to develop psychopathology and/or drug
dependence later in life. Therefore, in the present study, we assessed activity levels, emotionality, sensitivity to the effects of morphine, as well as
expression of proenkephalin and prodynorphin in several brain regions in 35 and 90-day-old male mice, subjected to postnatal manipulation
consisting in brief exposures to clean bedding (CB). In comparison with controls, CB mice showed reduced emotionality expressed as percentage
of time in open arms of the elevated plus maze both at 35 days of life and in adulthood. Increased nociceptive threshold was also present in both
time points measured. Conversely, higher locomotor activity was recorded in 35 days of life but not in adulthood. Analysis of film autoradiograms
revealed no changes in prodynorphin mRNA level, but statistically significant decrease in the level of proenkephalin mRNA in striatum in young
CB mice in comparison with young controls; no difference was observed between adult CB and control animals. CB adult mice also showed
hypersensitivity to the rewarding effect of morphine in comparison with controls in the place preference test. In conclusion, our results revealed
that in the critical period of development the effects of manipulation were evident, not only on behavioral responses but also on the neurochemical
markers considered in the present research. Postnatal manipulation could induce changes in the dynamic neuronal processes occurring during
development with long-term behavioral effects.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
D'Amato, FRANCESCA ROMANA; Pavone, Flaminia
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