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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred and eighteen male rats (Long-Evans) were acclimated to experimental procedures (i.e., handling, transferring from and back to "home" cage, body weight and colonic temperature determinations) for 2 wk and then subjected to cage confinement for 3 days before microwave (MW) exposure to 2,450 MHz for 1-, h, at 1-70 mW.cm-2 or sham exposure at ambient temperature of 24 +/- 1 degree C. Colonic temperature increased after exposure to power densities greater than or equal to 20 mW.cm-2 and was the most sensitive parameter measured. Inverse relationships between corticosterone and thyrotropin or growth hormone were noted after exposure for 1 h at 50 mW.cm-2 and above. Pituitary-thyroid function was inhibited after exposure to 20 mW.cm-2 for 2-8 h. Changes in other hormones were transient or inconsistent. Corticosterone, thyrotropin, and growth hormone levels could be correlated with power density or colonic temperature in rats exposed to MW for 1 h; corticosterone and thyrotropin levles correlated with colonic temperatures in shams. Body temperature influences adenohypophysial hormones in studies of MW biological effects.
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PMID:Delineating acute neuroendocrine responses in microwave-exposed rats. 738 Jul 6

The social behavior of outbred Long-Evans (LE) and Wistar (WI) rats was compared in a situation where access to food was particularly difficult (clearing an aquatic barrier, plus the necessity of carrying the food back to the home cage). In groups of either six WI or LE rats, only about 50% of individuals carried the food, and the others survived by attacking those that did. However, behavioral profiles associated with these acts were different in the two cases: LE carriers, contrary to WI carriers, restole some food, and LE noncarriers expressed more agonistic behavior and were more often attacked than were the WI noncarriers. Food flow and all associated, interactive behaviors were more complex in the LE than in the WI rats, indicating the likelihood of potential genetic differences in this testing situation.
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PMID:Potential stock differences in the social behavior of rats in a situation of restricted access to food. 748 45

Alpha-2 adrenoceptor antagonists remove the presynaptic negative feed-back control of norepinephrine release, by this enhancing the naturally occurring adrenergic activation. Male Long-Evans rats were injected with 1 mg/kg CH-38083, an alpha 2 adrenoceptor blocker. Twenty minutes later a size matched Wistar or Long-Evans opponent, respectively, was introduced in their home cage for 15 min (the Wistar strain is more aggressive than the Long-Evans in these circumstances). The treatment increased the number of biting attacks several folds in both situations. The correlations existing between the behavior of the intruder and the aggressiveness of the resident (treated) rat led to the conclusion that the catecholaminergic treatment increased the sensitivity of the animals to the behavioral actions of the intruder. The treated animals responded in an exaggerated fashion compared to their saline treated counterparts. An increase in the corticosterone response of the treated rats paralleled the increase in attack frequency, and seemed not to depend on the challenge received from the intruder.
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PMID:Alpha-2 adrenoceptor blockade and the response to intruder aggression in Long-Evans rats. 766 5

Male Long-Evans rats were implanted with blood pressure transmitters and introduced as intruders for 60 min into the home cage of a reproductively active resident male rat. Physical interaction ended after 3-5 min when the intruder displayed clear submissive behaviors. A protective wire cage was placed over the intruder until the animal was returned to its home cage. Systolic (+29.3 +/- 3.6 mmHg) and diastolic (+25.7 +/- 3.7 mmHg) blood pressures, pulse pressure (+7.3 +/- 2.0 mmHg), and heart rate (+129.0 +/- 12.6 BPM) peaked in the intruder rats during the defeat and did not fully return to control levels until return to the home cage. These acute changes as well as the heart rate and blood pressure baselines did not change when the confrontations were repeated on alternating days for a maximum of three trials per week. Pretreatment with clonidine (0.01, 0.03, 0.06, and 0.1 mg/kg) led to a dose-dependent decrease in the heart rate response but blood pressure was reduced similarly for all doses. We conclude that acute "defeat" can lead to an abrupt, large increase in blood pressure and heart rate in normotensive, Long-Evans rats that is sustained even in the absence of physical contact with the threatening resident. This response is diminished but not prevented by administration of clonidine.
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PMID:Blood pressure via telemetry during social confrontations in rats: effects of clonidine. 766 31

Morphological plasticity of medium-sized spiny neurons of the striatum was examined in Long-Evans hooded rats reared in complex or individual cage environments. Rat pups, aged 28-32 days, were housed either individually in standard laboratory cages or as a group in a large toy- and object-filled environment for 30 days. The spine density on dendrites of medium-sized spiny neurons in the dorsolateral striatum was then examined using the Golgi-Cox method. Rats reared in the complex environment displayed an increase of approximately 30% in spine density relative to those reared individually. These results demonstrate experience-dependent changes in neural structure in the striatum and suggest that the mechanisms for information storage in response to experience may be more widespread in the forebrain than previously believed.
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PMID:Differential rearing alters spine density on medium-sized spiny neurons in the rat corpus striatum: evidence for association of morphological plasticity with early response gene expression. 767 Aug 34

Defeat and the threat of defeat by an aggressive conspecific is stressful and may engender an anxiety- or fear-like state in animals; the present experiment investigated whether defeat generalized to the discriminative stimulus properties of PTZ and how benzodiazepine receptors were involved in this generalization. Separate groups of male Long-Evans rats (Rattus norvegicus) were trained to discriminate 20 mg/kg pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) or 0.4 mg/kg midazolam (MDZ) from saline in a two-choice drug-discrimination task. After establishing stimulus control, PTZ- and MDZ-trained rats were exposed to an aggressive conspecific which resulted in defeat, as defined by the display of defensive and submissive postures as well as audible and ultrasonic vocalizations. Administration of saline after defeat resulted in greater than 80% PTZ lever selection in 15 out of 25 PTZ-trained rats; this effect was attenuated through pretreatment with MDZ (1 mg/kg). Furthermore, short-term defeat substitution for the PTZ discriminative stimulus was not accompanied by long-term changes in the post-defeat generalization curves for PTZ and MDZ when compared to pre-defeat generalization curves. Nor did defeat alter the antagonism of PTZ by diazepam (2.5 mg/kg) or MDZ by flumazenil (10 mg/kg). In order further to characterize the necessary features for defeat substitution for the PTZ discriminative stimulus, exposure to a threatening conspecific was also attempted by PTZ-trained rats protected from physical contact with a wire mesh cage. In these tests, saline continued to engender greater than 50% PTZ lever responding in 15 of 25 rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Defeat engenders pentylenetetrazole-appropriate responding in rats: antagonism by midazolam. 770 Oct 54

This longitudinal study, extending over 12 months, assessed the behavioural and biochemical effects of hippocampal sympathetic ingrowth (HSI) into the partially denervated hippocampus. Male Long-Evans rats received fimbria-fornix lesions (FIFO) or sham operations at 90 days of age. At the same time half of the rats from each group sustained bilateral ablation of the superior cervical ganglia (SCGX). A battery of behavioural tests, measuring spontaneous alternation, activity in the open field and home cage, and radial-maze performance, were employed, starting after one very short (16 days) and one extended (216 days) post-operative delay. Neurochemical analyses measuring choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity, high-affinity choline (HACU) and noradrenaline uptake by hippocampal synaptosomes (HANU), hippocampal noradrenaline ([NA]), serotonin ([5-HT]) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid ([5-HIAA]) concentrations were carried out in a dorsal, a "middle" and a ventral region of the hippocampus. Lesion of the FIFO induced a significant and enduring deficit in radial-maze performance, in addition to a persistent locomotor hyperactivity. ChAT and HACU were significantly depleted in all three regions of the hippocampus at 12 months, and these deficits were negatively correlated with maze performance. SCGX in the presence of the FIFO lesion significantly reduced [NA] in the middle region of the hippocampus, as compared to SCGX rats, and contributed to a restoration of lesion-induced depletions in [5-HT] and [5-HIAA] in the middle and ventral hippocampal regions, whilst failing to elicit any behavioural changes at either time point. It is concluded that if lesion-induced HSI indeed occurred, as is suggested by neurochemical evidence, it had no effect upon the observed behavioural deficits elicited by transection of the FIFO in the rat.
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PMID:Behavioural and neurochemical effects of superior cervical ganglionectomy in rats with septo-hippocampal lesions. 773 90

One of the prominent symptoms in alcoholics during withdrawal is an intense feeling of anxiety. Recently new tests have become available which may index anxiety in rodents. We have evaluated two such tests in our model of withdrawal from ethanol (ET) in rats. Rats were given either ET in milk (7-13 g/kg/4 days) or equicaloric dextrin maltose in milk via implanted gastric cannuli. Rats were scored for classical withdrawal symptoms (tremors, convulsions, stereotyped behavior), for stimulus-elicited ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs), and in one study for exploration of novel objects placed in their home cage at various points after the last dose of ET. In Sprague-Dawley rats, classical withdrawal symptoms were highest between 8-12 hours, and disappeared by 36 hours. Latency to explore a novel object was unchanged, but duration was depressed between 10-30 hours, and was recovered by 70 hours. Following a less intense Day 1 treatment regimen in Long-Evans rats, the vocalizations were greatly increased in number, and peak response occurred sooner (6 hours post-infusion) and was of shorter overall duration (50 hours). Pretreatment with diazepam (1.25-5.0 mg/kg) depressed the number of vocalizations during ET withdrawal (ETW), which suggests that this measure could index anxiety in animal models of withdrawal from ET.
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PMID:Observations of novel behaviors as indices of ethanol withdrawal-induced anxiety. 774 44

Ultrasonic vocalizations may be an expression of the affective pain response in laboratory rodents. The present experiment compared morphine's effects on high (33-60 kHz) and low (20-32 kHz) frequency ultrasonic vocalizations to its effects on a range of unconditioned behavioral responses to aversive stimuli; the influence of estrous cyclicity on morphine sensitivity was also investigated. In experiment 1, naive female Long-Evans rats, selected during estrus or diestrus, received cumulative morphine (1, 3, 6, 10 mg/kg SC) or saline, and in experiment 2, rats were pretreated with naltrexone (0.1 mg/kg IP) 5 min before morphine (17, 30, 60, 100 mg/kg SC). The following endopoints were measured 20-25 min post-injection: (1) tail flick latency; (2) ultrasonic and audible vocalizations; (3) the behavioral response to aggressive attack; and (4) locomotor activity. Following a brief exposure to an attack, rats were threatened by an aggressor but protected from further attack by a wire mesh cage (30 x 21.5 x 20 cm), thereby allowing for continued behavioral and vocal measurement without the risk of physical injury; video and audio recordings were made of the attack encounter and a subset of the protected encounter (1 min). The endpoint most potently and specifically modulated by morphine was high frequency ultrasounds. The rate of high frequency calling varied as a function of the estrous cycle, supporting gonadal hormone modulation of ultrasonic vocalizations. Low frequency ultrasounds, by contrast, were relatively insensitive to opiate manipulation and were less influenced by estrous cyclicity. High frequency vocalizations may be a more sensitive indication of the affective response to an attacking conspecific that low frequency calls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ultrasounds emitted by female rats during agonistic interactions: effects of morphine and naltrexone. 785 2

Ultrasonic vocalizations (USV) in rats may communicate "affective" states during pain, sex and aggression. This proposal was evaluated in an experiment with adult male Long-Evans rats during agonistic encounters; specifically, morphine and naltrexone effects were studied on different types of USV by intruder rats exposed to resident attacks and to "threat of attacks" (i.e., intruder residing within the home cage of the resident but prevented from physical contact by a wire mesh cage). Intruders readily emitted USV during agonistic encounters. These calls consisted primarily of two distinct distributions of pure tone whistles: 0.3-3 s, 19-32 kHz ("low") calls and 0.02-0.3 s, 32-64 kHz ("high") calls. Sonographic analysis revealed a considerable repertoire of frequency modulated calls. Different types of vocalizations proved to be differentially sensitive to the opiate treatments: morphine (1-10 mg/kg SC) dose-dependently decreased the rate, duration and pitch of both low and high frequency USV during the threat of attack; this decrease in rate and duration measures was naltrexone-reversible (0.1 mg/kg IP). Interestingly, audible vocalizations were also emitted but were unaffected by morphine in this dose range. Concomitant with the decrease in USV after morphine was a dose-dependent decrease in rearing, walking and nasal contact behavior with increases in submissive crouch behavior and tail flick analgesia. The decreases in rate and duration of both low and high USV and the pitch of specific frequency modulated calls after morphine administration may reflect an attenuation of affective aspects of pain, and the many characteristics of US (rate, duration, pitch, frequency modulation, pre-and suffix attributes and temporal structure) point to potentially diverse functions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Morphine attenuates ultrasonic vocalization during agonistic encounters in adult male rats. 787 Sep 76


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