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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In rodents the preputial glands are one of the major sources of pheromones. These volatile chemosignaling compounds are known to elicit specific behavioral and physiological effects in their conspecifics. While
social stress
can alter both the behavior and hormonal status of rodents, little is known about its influence on the volatile constituents of the preputial glands. We have examined the composition of volatile compounds in the preputial glands of gonadally intact male rats housed for 70 days in either unisex triads (three/
cage
) or singly. The rank status of triad-housed rats was based on quantitative behavioral assessments taken during the initial 30 min of triad housing. Dominant rats had heavier preputial glands compared to subdominant and subordinate rats. Capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry identified 56 volatile preputial compounds, of these 17 did not differ between groups while 26 compounds were significantly higher in the single-housed compared to the triad-housed rats. Six additional volatile compounds were higher in the dominant compared to the other 3 groups, while another six compounds were higher in both the dominant and single-housed rats compared to the subdominant and subordinate rats. It can be concluded that both housing condition and social rank status have significant but different effects on the composition of volatile compounds found in preputial glands of male rats. The physiological and behavioral significance of these changes in preputial gland volatile compound composition in rats remain to be investigated.
...
PMID:Social housing influences the composition of volatile compounds in the preputial glands of male rats. 1825 66
We previously reported that males undergoing chronic
social stress
(SS) (daily 1h isolation and new
cage
partner on days 30-45 of age) in adolescence habituated (decreased corticosterone release) to the homotypic stressor, but females did not. Here, we report that adolescent males exposed to chronic
social stress
had potentiated corticosterone release to a heterotypic stressor (15 min of swim stress) compared to acutely stressed and control males. The three groups of males did not differ in depressive-like behaviour (time spent immobile) during the swim stress. Corticosterone release in socially stressed females was elevated 45 min after the swim stress compared to acutely stressed and control females, and socially stressed females exhibited more depressive behaviour (longer durations of immobility and shorter durations of climbing) than the other females during the swim stress. Separate groups of rats were tested as adults several weeks after the
social stress
, and there were no group differences in corticosterone release after the swim stress. The only group difference in behaviour among the adults was more time spent climbing in socially stressed males than in controls. Thus, there are sex-specific effects of
social stress
in adolescence on endocrine responses and depressive behaviour to a heterotypic stressor, but, unlike for anxiety, substantial recovery is evident in adulthood in the absence of intervening stress exposures.
...
PMID:Increased depressive behaviour in females and heightened corticosterone release in males to swim stress after adolescent social stress in rats. 1834 57
Genetic predisposition and
social stress
may represent important risk factors in etiology of hypertension associated with endothelial dysfunction. Perturbations of endothelial structural integrity are also critical for the pathogenesis of vascular diseases. We examined effect of chronic
social stress
on structure of aortic endothelium in borderline hypertensive (BHR) and normotensive Wistar rats. Male BHR - offspring of Wistar mothers and SHR fathers and age-matched W were exposed to 6-week crowding stress (5 rats/
cage
, 200 cm2/rat). Aortic tissue was processed for electron microscopy and NO synthase activity measurement. Crowding stress significantly increased blood pressure in BHR compared to basal values (140+/-3 mm Hg vs. 130+/-3 mm Hg, p<0.05) and reduced enzyme activity by 37 % (p<0.01) in the aorta of BHR. Local slight structural alterations of endothelium were found in non-stressed BHR (p<0.001) when compared with Wistar rats. Chronic stress caused marked (p<0.005) subcellular injury of endothelial cells in aorta of BHR characterized by mitochondrial damage, presence of vacuoles, increased number of lysosomes, Weibel-Palade bodies, changes of intercellular connections and local disruption of endothelium, while only slight changes were seen in Wistar rats. Results suggest increased sensitivity of aortic endothelium of BHR to chronic crowding that may contribute to acceleration of arterial dysfunction.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural characteristics of aortic endothelial cells in borderline hypertensive rats exposed to chronic social stress. 1837 95
The present study was designed to determine the involvement of nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandins (PG) in the stimulatory action of clenbuterol, a selective beta(2)-adrenergic receptor agonist on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis under basal and social crowding stress conditions. Clenbuterol given i.c.v. (10 microg) or i.p. (0.2 mg/kg) considerably increased ACTH and corticosterone secretion. A selective beta(2)-receptor antagonist compound ICI 118551 and non-selective beta-receptor antagonist propranolol given by either route reduced the stimulatory action of clenbuterol. Crowding stress (21 rats in a
cage
for 7) for 3-7 days significantly reduced the i.c.v. clenbuterol-induced ACTH and corticosterone secretion and i.p. clenbuterol-elicited ACTH secretion. L-NAME, mainly endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS) blocker, stronger than L-NNA, a neuronal NOS blocker, reduced the clenbuterol-evoked ACTH and corticosterone secretion in control rats but did not significantly alter this secretion already reduced by crowding stress. Piroxicam, predominantly constitutive cyclooxygenase (COX-1) inhibitor, given i.p. significantly diminished the i.p. clenbuterol-induced ACTH and corticosterone secretion in control rats and tended to reverse the reduction of ACTH secretion by crowding stress. These results indicate that clenbuterol, a selective beta(2)-adrenoceptor agonist, is much stronger stimulator of the HPA axis than isoprenaline, a non-selective beta-receptor agonist. Social crowding stress reduces to a larger extent the HPA response to beta(2)-receptor stimulation. Likewise, in the HPA axis stimulation via beta(2)-adrenoceptors endogenous NO and prostaglandins are significantly involved. Beta2-adrenoceptor is a dominant functional subtype of beta-receptor in the stimulatory and modulatory signals regulating the HPA axis activity under basal and
social stress
conditions.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and prostaglandins in the clenbuterol-induced ACTH and corticosterone secretion. 1844 96
Individual identification is a common method used in animal research. This study was designed to examine if commonly used identification systems (i.e., leg bands, wing bands, neck tags, and livestock markers) have different effects on hens' behavioral and physiological homeostasis. At 18 wk of age, hens were paired in all combinations of treatments and control (unmarked hens; n = 10) in a novel
cage
for 5 trials of 1 h each to test the effects of identification markers on social behaviors. Wing-banded hens tended to exhibit increased feather pecking compared with control hens (P < 0.10), suggesting a slight increase in
social stress
. No effect of identification treatment was evident on frequency of aggressive behaviors (P > 0.10). At 20 wk of age, absolute fluctuating asymmetry (FA), but not relative FA, of shank length and width was more significant in leg-banded hens (P < 0.05) and tended to be significant in wing-banded hens (P < 0.10), compared with control hens. Asymmetry of the shank is often a result of high stress levels, including
social stress
. Body weight measured at 20 wk of age showed that hens with leg bands were significantly lighter than control hens (P < 0.05), possibly as a result of decreased access to resources, increased metabolism, or decreased appetite due to elevated stress. Increased absolute FA and decreased BW could be evidence of a disruption of the hens' physiological homeostasis due to increased stress. Hens with leg bands also tended to have lower percentage of heterophils (P < 0.10), indicative of increased stress and reduced immunocompetence. Our findings provide clear evidence of the negative effects of wing and leg band identification systems on hens' well-being, altering both physiological and behavioral homeostasis. Without knowledge of the effects, the use of individual identification systems could lead to misinterpretation of experimental results.
...
PMID:Different effects of individual identification systems on chicken well-being. 1849 91
The aim of this study was to analyze the impact of physical and
social stress
on the avian forebrain morphology. Therefore, we used laying hens kept in different housing systems from puberty (approximately 16 weeks old) until the age of 48 weeks: battery cages, small littered ground pen, and free range system. Cell body sizes and catecholaminergic and serotonergic innervation patterns were investigated in brain areas expected to be sensitive to differences in environmental stimulation: hippocampal substructures and the nidopallium caudolaterale (NCL), a functional analogue of the prefrontal cortex. Our analysis shows both structures differing in the affected morphological parameters. Compared to battery
cage
hens, hens in the free range system developed larger cells in the dorsomedial hippocampus. Only these animals exhibited an asymmetry in the tyrosine hydroxylase density with more fibres in the left dorsomedial hippocampus. We assume that the higher spatial complexity of the free range system is the driving force of these changes. In contrast, in the NCL the housing systems affected only the serotonergic innervation pattern with highest fibre densities in free range hens. Moreover hens of the free range system displayed the worst plumage condition, which most likely is caused by feather pecking causing an altered serotonergic innervation pattern. Considering the remarkable differences between the three housing conditions, their effects on hippocampal structures and the NCL were surprisingly mild. This observation suggests that the adult brain of laying hens displays limited sensitivity to differences in social and physical environment induced post-puberty, which warrants further studies.
...
PMID:Consequences of different housing conditions on brain morphology in laying hens. 1913 45
The aim of the current study was to generate socially conditioned fear in two different strains of rat (Wistar, W and Sprague Dawley, SD) using social conflict, in order to investigate whether the magnitude of the conditioned fear responses in each strain was related to behaviour exhibited prior to or during fear induction (i.e. social conflict). On day one of the study, all intruders were assessed for exploratory activity in a novel environment. Twenty four hours following the novel environment test the locomotor activity of the intruders was assessed, while they underwent a single familiarisation exposure to the arena in which the conflict was subsequently to occur in. Twenty-four hours following familiarisation, intruders underwent either a 10 min social conflict or sham conflict session. One day later we examined the response of the intruders when they were returned to the vacant resident's
cage
. Upon return to the conflict context, we examined the intruder's ultrasonic distress vocalisations and the extent to which locomotor activity was inhibited. We found that W rats displayed significantly more immobility (i.e. conditioned fear) upon return to context than did SD rats (p < 0.05). Importantly, we observed that the differences in the two strains behaviour upon return to context appeared to be related to their quite different patterns of coping behaviour. The results of the current study indicate that preclinical between-strain comparisons potentially have much to offer in regard to understanding the basis of resilience to
social stress
.
...
PMID:Strain differences in coping behaviour, novelty seeking behaviour, and susceptibility to socially conditioned fear: a comparison between Wistar and Sprague Dawley rats. 1920 14
Social stress in adolescence is correlated with emergence of psychopathologies during early adulthood. In this study, the authors investigated the impact of social defeat stress during mid-adolescence on adult male brain and behavior. Adolescent male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to repeated social defeat for 5 days while controls were placed in a novel empty
cage
. When exposed to defeat-associated cues as adults, previously defeated rats showed increased risk assessment and behavioral inhibition, demonstrating long-term memory for the defeat context. However, previously defeated rats exhibited increased locomotion in both elevated plus-maze and open field tests, suggesting heightened novelty-induced behavior. Adolescent defeat also affected adult monoamine levels in stress-responsive limbic regions, causing decreased medial prefrontal cortex dopamine, increased norepinephrine and serotonin in the ventral dentate gyrus, and decreased norepinephrine in the dorsal raphe. Our results suggest that adolescent social defeat produces both deficits in anxiety responses and altered monoaminergic function in adulthood. This model offers potential for identifying specific mechanisms induced by severe adolescent
social stress
that may contribute to increased adult male vulnerability to psychopathology.
...
PMID:Adolescent male rats exposed to social defeat exhibit altered anxiety behavior and limbic monoamines as adults. 1948 63
Psychosocial factors, particularly
social stress
, may compromise reproduction. However, some individuals may be more susceptible to socially induced infertility. The present study used group-housed, adult, ovariectomized rhesus monkeys to test the hypothesis that exposure to psychosocial stress, imposed by social subordination, would enhance estradiol (E2)-negative feedback inhibition of LH. Because polymorphisms in the gene encoding the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4) may contribute to individual differences in response to adverse environments, we determined whether subordinate females with the short-promoter-length allele (s-variant) would show greater suppression of LH. Subordinate females, particularly those with the s-variant SLC6A4 genotype, received significantly higher rates of noncontact aggression from more dominant
cage
mates and had consistently lower body weights. Serum LH was not influenced by social status in the absence of E2. In contrast, subordinate females were hypersensitive to E2-negative feedback inhibition of LH. Furthermore, serum LH in subordinate females with s-variant SLC6A4 genotype was maximally suppressed by Day 4 of treatment, whereas nadir concentrations were not reached until later in treatment in other females. Finally, pharmacological elevation of serum cortisol potentiated E2-negative feedback inhibition in all females. The current data suggest that infertility induced by psychosocial stressors may be mediated by hypersensitivity to E2-negative feedback and that polymorphisms in the SLC6A4 gene may contribute to differences in reproductive compromise in response to chronic stress.
...
PMID:Social subordination and polymorphisms in the gene encoding the serotonin transporter enhance estradiol inhibition of luteinizing hormone secretion in female rhesus monkeys. 1960 83
Farm practices such as increasing group size (GS) and mixing unfamiliar chickens may result in repeated social disruption (RSD) and affect the well-being of hens. To examine whether there are genetic differences in response to
social stress
, 2 genetic strains of White Leghorn hens were used [i.e., high group production and survivability (HGPS) and DeKalb XL commercial strain (DXL). At 50 wk of age,
social stress
was created by increasing GS from 4 hens (control) to 8 hens (experimental) per
cage
and removing hens within the stressed groups to create 4 treatments (control-HGPS, control-DXL, GS/RSD-HGPS, and GS/RSD-DXL). For RSD, 2 hens per
cage
were moved weekly among the experimental cages within the same treatment. At 58 wk of age, blood sample and brain were collected from 1 hen per
cage
(n=10 per treatment). Whole-blood tryptophan and serotonin (5-HT) and plasma norepinephrine (NE), epinephrine (EP), and dopamine (DA) were analyzed by HPLC. The raphe nuclei and the hypothalamus (HYP) were dissected and analyzed by HPLC for the central NE, EP, DA, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), homovanillic acid, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), 5-HT, and the ratios of DOPAC:DA and 5-HIAA:5-HT. There were no line differences in the concentrations of peripheral tryptophan, 5-HT, EP, NE, and DA in response to GS-RSD (P>0.10). However, neuronal transmitters were regulated differently in the different central nuclei between the lines. In the raphe nuclei, control-HGPS tended to have a higher 5-HIAA:5-HT ratio than the control-DXL (P=0.09). Concentrations of EP were increased in the DXL hens (P<0.01), whereas the HGPS hens had decreased levels of DOPAC (P<0.05) and DA turnover (DOPAC:DA, P<0.01) post GS-RSD. In the HYP, compared with relative controls, there were no significant differences in the concentrations of 5-HT, whereas the levels of 5-HIAA were reduced (P<0.01) after GS-RSD, suggesting that GS-RSD led to a lower 5-HT turnover in the HYP. The results indicate that selection for docility and productivity alters serotonergic and catecholamine homeostasis in hens in response to
social stress
, GS-RSD.
...
PMID:Effects of group size and repeated social disruption on the serotonergic and dopaminergic systems in two genetic lines of White Leghorn laying hens. 1976 52
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