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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Attack behavior of reliably aggressive male Long-
Evans
rats against unfamiliar male intruders was observed immediately following copulation to one or more ejaculations. Compulatory series to five ejaculations did not differ from copulation to a single ejaculation or from a noncopulatory control in affecting aggressive behavior. Repetitive biting attacks occurred in all conditions, with comparable wounding. Evidently, the male postejaculatory state of insensitivity to sexual stimuli does not extend to stimuli eliciting intermale aggression. A second experiment determined the attack-eliciting capacity of foreign males placed in the home
cage
of an actively copulating male. As intromissions increased and the interval to ejaculation decreased, the probability of intermale aggression and interruption of copulation diminished. The results are discussed in reference to sexual and aggressive strategies of the copulating male.
...
PMID:Copulation and intermale aggression in rats. 57 79
A study was made of the effect of hypothalamic hyperphagia on the tolerance of lung to explosive decompression in male Long-
Evans
rats. The control and hypothalamic hyperphagic rats were explosively decompressed together from 1 atm to an ambient pressure of 30 min Hg in 0.04s. The hypothalamic-lesiones rats gained from 252 g average weight to 460 g, a 82% gain. The respective figures for the controls. were from 248 g to 336 g and 36%. It was also observed that a considerable amount of fat was accumulated between pleura and lungs in experimental animals. The average accumulation of fat between pleura and lungs in experimental rats was 3.23 g, while the value of the control group was only 0.42 g. The difference was statistically significant. Such an increase of fat accumulation in the thoracic
cage
could decrease the tidal volume. The severity of decompression-induced pulmonary hemorrages might thus be decreased. On the other hand, it also seems possible that the soft fat cushion between pleura and lungs might damp the bruising of the pulmonary tissue against the resistant thoracic wall to a certain extent, thus resulting in a decreased susceptibility to decompression-induced lung damage. Besides , the mortality in obese rats undergoing explosive decompression was also significantly lower than that of the controls
...
PMID:Influence of hypothalamic hyperphagia on tolerance of lung to explosive decompression. 105 29
To assess the capacity for experience to induce rapid alterations in the dendritic fields of cortical neurons, male Long-
Evans
hooded rats aged 30-31 days were housed in either a complex environment (EC) or an individual
cage
(IC) for 4 days. The basilar dendrites of layer III pyramidal cells in area 17 of visual cortex were measured in Golgi-stained sections. EC rats exhibited significant increases in total dendritic length and total number of branches. This finding demonstrates that the structural modifications previously reported after 30 days in the complex environment are well underway after only 4 days.
...
PMID:Increases in dendritic length in occipital cortex after 4 days of differential housing in weanling rats. 141 72
At 31 days of age, Long-
Evans
female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways and, 14 days later, received intrahippocampal suspension grafts prepared from the region including the medial septum and the diagonal band of Broca (Group S, n = 11), from the region including the mesencephalic raphe (Group R, n = 11) or from both regions together (Group S+R, n = 11). Sham-operated (Group Sham, n = 9) and lesion-only (Group Les, n = 11) rats served as non-grafted controls. Seven Sham, 7 Les and 8 rats from each transplant group were tested for home
cage
activity (6 months after grafting) and radial maze performance (between 7.5 and 8.5 months post-grafting). One month after completion of behavioral testing, the dorsal hippocampi of these rats were prepared for measuring choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and high affinity synaptosomal uptake of both [3H]choline and [3H]serotonin. The remaining rats were used for histological verifications on brain sections stained for acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The lesions increased locomotor activity, impaired radial maze learning and, in the dorsal hippocampus, reduced AChE positive staining, decreased ChAT activity (-73%) as well as high affinity uptake of both choline (-81%) and serotonin (-82%). Neither type of transplant produced any significant behavioral recovery. However, septal transplants increased hippocampal AChE positivity, restored ChAT activity and enhanced choline uptake to 116% and 70% of the values found in sham-operated rats, respectively; they had no significant effect on uptake of serotonin. Transplants from the raphe region had weak effects on hippocampal AChE positivity, increased both the ChAT activity and the choline uptake to 70% ad 38% of the sham-operated rats, respectively, and produced an (over)compensation of the serotonin uptake which reached 324% of the values found in sham-operated rats. The co-transplantation of both regions resulted in restoration of ChAT activity (113% of sham-operated rats values), choline uptake (83% of sham-operated rats) and serotonin uptake (129% of sham-operated rats). Our neurochemical data show that after extensive denervation of the hippocampus, intrahippocampal grafts of fetal neurons may foster a neurotransmitter-specific recovery which depends upon the anatomical origin of the grafted cells: a graft rich in serotonergic neurons overcompensates the serotonergic deficit, a graft rich in cholinergic neurons attenuates the cholinergic deficit, whereas a mixture of both types of grafts produces recovery from both types of deficits. Thereby, both the feasibility and the interest of the co-grafting technique are confirmed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of septal and/or raphe cell suspension grafts on hippocampal choline acetyltransferase activity, high affinity synaptosomal uptake of choline and serotonin, and behavior in rats with extensive septohippocampal lesions. 151 8
The clinical effects of two neurotoxicants, acrylamide and 2,5-hexanedione, were compared in rats using a functional observational battery (FOB), which includes a series of home
cage
and open-field observations, sensorimotor measurements, and physiological parameters. Neurotoxicity was assessed weekly in adult male Long-
Evans
rats after initiation of IP administration of 9 doses of acrylamide (12, 15, or 50 mg/kg given 3 times a week) and 28 doses of 2,5-hexanedione (150, 225, and 350 mg/kg given daily). Using the FOB, it was possible to detect differences in neurotoxic effects of these two chemicals. Acrylamide significantly affected home
cage
posture, foot splay and time on the rotarod, whereas 2,5-hexanedione altered hindlimb grip strength and the approach response. Both compounds caused changes in ability to walk, right, and maintain agility on a rotarod within 21 days from initiation of toxicant administration. In addition, both compounds caused dose-dependent decreases in weight gain. Neuropathic changes were detectable at the highest dosages at 21 days in acrylamide-treated rats and at 28 days in rats treated with 2,5-hexanedione. Administration of acrylamide also decreased activities of neural esterases. This study indicated that the FOB could be used to detect evidence of neurotoxicity in rats treated with acrylamide and 2,5-hexanedione, with alterations evident even before pathological changes were induced by 2,5-hexanedione.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity of acrylamide and 2,5-hexanedione in rats evaluated using a functional observational battery and pathological examination. 152 32
The comparative neurotoxicity of subchronic exposure to 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA) and acrylamide (ACR) was evaluated using a functional observational battery (FOB) and neuropathology. Three dose levels of each compound (HEA: 3, 20, 60 mg/kg; ACR: 1, 4, 12 mg/kg) were administered intraperitoneally to male and female Long-
Evans
rats (n = 10/sex/dose level), 5 days/week for 13 weeks. Two vehicle control groups were also included. The FOB, which includes home-
cage
and open-field observations and interactive tests of sensory, neuromuscular, and autonomic function, was administered before dosing, at monthly intervals, and on the day after the last dose. Subsets of rats (n = 6/sex/dose level) were then perfused and tissues from the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerve were prepared for light microscopic evaluation. There were clear differences between the effects of HEA and ACR. ACR produced time- and dose-related changes in FOB measures of muscle tone and equilibrium, and produced axonal degeneration in peripheral nerves and within long tracts of the spinal cord. HEA exposure was also associated with changes in muscular function on FOB testing, but the magnitude of the effects was not as great as with ACR and not dose related. In addition, no neuropathological changes were detected after HEA exposure. Thus, the effects of HEA did not resemble those of ACR. The FOB data were summarized in domains of neurobehavioral functions. Using a composite score analysis, ACR was shown to produce prominent effects in the neuromuscular domain whereas HEA was largely without effect. When the data are analyzed in this manner, the neurotoxic potential of HEA appears to be minimal.
...
PMID:Comparison of subchronic neurotoxicity of 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate and acrylamide in rats. 159 60
Long-
Evans
female rats sustained electrolytic lesions of the fimbria and the dorsal fornix and, 10-14 days later, received intrahippocampal suspension grafts of septal-diagonal band tissue from either 14-day-old (Group S14, n = 8) or 16-day-old fetuses (Group S16, n = 10), or of parietal cortex from 16-day-old fetuses (Group Cx, n = 10). Sham-operated (Group S, n = 10) and lesion-only (Group Fifo, n = 21) rats served as non-grafted controls. Spontaneous alternation was assessed in a T-maze at three weeks and two months post-grafting. Home
cage
and open field activity as well as radial maze learning were assessed from two months post-grafting onwards. Fimbria-fornix lesions induced lasting hyperactivity in both the open field and the home
cage
, impaired radial maze learning and transiently reduced spontaneous alternation rates. Neither type of graft significantly affected home
cage
activity. Septal-diagonal band grafts improved open field habituation (within trial decline of ambulatory activity) and radial maze learning; the former was observed only in S16 rats, whereas the latter was observed only in S14 rats. Acetylcholinesterase histochemistry revealed an initial lesion-induced depletion of hippocampal acetylcholinesterase (eight days post-surgery) which was no longer observed at the end of the experiment. Acetylcholinesterase positivity was similar in S14 and S16 grafts, which also contained many choline acetyltransferase-positive neurons. Cortical grafts were found to be almost devoid of acetylcholinesterase positivity and no well-stained choline acetyltransferase-positive neurons could be identified. Septal-diagonal band grafts from 14-day-old fetuses and cortical grafts contained more parvalbumin-positive neurons than septal-diagonal band grafts provided by 16-day-old fetuses. These results suggest that grafts rich in cholinergic neurons may promote behavioral recovery from fimbria-fornix lesion-induced deficits. However, such a recovery may concern different behavioral deficits as a function of the age of the implanted tissue, suggesting that the maturity stage of the donor may critically influence the functional expression in the lesioned recipient. Also, such a recovery does not appear to be related solely to cholinergic hippocampal (re)innervation and might depend on the presence, not only of cholinergic neurons, but also of non-cholinergic neuronal populations, such as parvalbumin-positive (probably GABAergic) neurons.
...
PMID:Graft-induced behavioral recovery from subcallosal septohippocampal damage in rats depends on maturity stage of donor tissue. 177 34
Despite clear functional significance, understanding of exploratory behavior is hampered by the lack of a careful descriptive account. This article reports extensive descriptions of rats' behavior in a stable environment and after environmental change. For 7 nights, 12 male Long-
Evans
rats (Rattus norvegicus) were given access to a large arena. Subjects budgeted session time differently across days, spending less time in the home
cage
and more time interacting with objects. Locomotion and general activities were typically unchanged over days. Several measures of object interaction showed systematic changes across sessions for the nonmanipulable object but not for the manipulable object. Finally, exploratory and spatial locomotor patterns were modified in response to the addition or removal of objects. These results indicate that exploratory and investigatory behaviors are lawful and orderly expressions of spontaneous behavioral organization.
...
PMID:Molar characteristics of exploratory and investigatory behavior in the rat (Rattus norvegicus). 177 65
The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of genetic strain on the acute and long-term thermoregulatory response to the neurotoxicant trimethyltin (TMT) in rats of the Long-
Evans
(LE) and Fischer 344 (FCH) strains. In one study basic thermoregulatory responses including colonic temperature (Tc), metabolic rate (MR), evaporative water loss (EWL), motor activity (MA), and thermal conductance (Cd) were measured in both rat strains at ambient temperatures (Ta) of 10, 28, and 37 degrees C. It was found that the LE rat has a significantly higher Tc when it is measured in their home
cage
. Because of its smaller body mass the FCH rat has a higher MR at all Ta values. The FCH rat also has a greater rate of EWL during exposure to a Ta of 37 degrees C. Following iv administration of 8.0 mg/kg TMT both rat strains become significantly hypothermic; however, the effect differed significantly between the strains. At 26-34 d after TMT exposure thermoregulatory responses at Ta values of 10-37 degrees C were generally similar to that of the saline controls. Overall, the LE and FCH strains of rat exhibit some distinct thermoregulatory differences in response to changes in Ta.
...
PMID:Comparison of rats of the Fischer 344 and Long-Evans strains in their autonomic thermoregulatory response to trimethyltin administration. 199 25
Two groups of rats (male, Long-
Evans
) were studied in a continuous access situation, in which ethanol, food and water intake patterns were monitored, 23 h/day. One group of rats was initiated to lever press for ethanol prior to study in the continuous access situation by use of a secondary-conditioning procedure. The other group had no prior initiation. It was found that the ethanol self-administration pattern of the initiated rats was similar to a previous study using another initiation procedure. After four weeks, the noninitiated group also demonstrated an ethanol intake pattern similar to initiated animals. However, the specific nature of individual ethanol drinking bouts in the noninitiated animals was found to be different, suggesting that initiation resulted in larger and more ethanol-drinking bouts. In addition, the noninitiated animals failed to show any home-
cage
shift in ethanol preference, which is observed after the use of the initiation procedures. The only major difference found between the sucrose-substitution initiation procedure and the secondary-conditioning procedure occurred when response requirements to obtain food were increased. In this situation, ethanol intake increased only in the sucrose-substitution initiated animals. The relation of this finding to the underlying theoretical basis for each type of initiation procedure is discussed.
...
PMID:Ethanol self-administration in a nonrestricted access situation: effect of ethanol initiation. 200 85
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