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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
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Adrenal and plasma corticosterone levels under conditions of preoperative stress (removal from animal to experimental rooms, removal from a home cage, handling, weighing and injecting with saline) were more than 2-fold higher in female rats than in male ones. Females, compared with males, showed more pronounced decrease in corticosterone responses to preoperative stress and laparotomy under nembutal anesthesia, which blocked stress-induced emotional activation. One hour after recovery from anesthesia laparotomized females but not males, demonstrated a significant (5-fold) increase in plasma corticosterone level. The absolute values of plasma corticosterone in laparotomized females, compared with males, were 2-fold lower under anesthesia but 2-fold higher after recovery from anesthesia. It is supposed that in females, compared with males, stress-induced emotional tension plays more considerable role in endocrine stress responses. This provides higher adrenocortical sensitivity to stress in conscious female rats than in male animals.
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PMID:[Sex differences in response to stress in conscious and anesthesized rats during surgical stress]. 139 54

Beak trimming pullets at an early age is a widespread industry practice. There is some concern that this practice may have effects on the subsequent performance of the birds in the production phase. Effects of beak treatment (trimmed or untrimmed) and rearing floor type (litter or wire) on performance of caged layers were evaluated in a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Pullets that were trimmed or untrimmed at 10 days of age and reared on either litter or wire floors were placed in a cage house. Production factors and stress measurements were recorded to determine detrimental effects of the early trimming and rearing floor types. No interactions (P = .15) between rearing floor type and beak treatment were observed for BW, feed consumption, egg production, heart weight, spleen weight, or blood corticosterone. However, an interaction (P = .02) between rearing floor type and beak treatment was observed for adrenal weight. There were no differences (P = .08) in the final BW of the pullets. Birds reared on litter ate considerably (P = .0002) more than those reared on wire. There were no differences (P = .27) in egg production rate. Adrenal weights were different (P = .007), with the litter-raised birds having much smaller adrenals at the end of the 36-wk trial. Hearts of the beak-trimmed birds were smaller (P = .02) than those of the untrimmed birds. There were no differences in spleen weights (P = .07) or blood corticosterone levels (P = .07). Differences in the feather cover were observed.
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PMID:Effect of rearing floor type and ten-day beak trimming on stress and performance of caged layers. 153 24

Studied were isolation induced effects in guinea pigs. Males (CM) living in two colonies (12 males, 12 females, each) were compared to males (IM) born in the colonies and kept isolated from their 2nd month of age. The findings were: At 19 months of age CM showed higher testosterone and cortisol titers, higher adrenal tyrosine hydroxylase activities and higher seminal vesicles weights than IM. Body, spleen, and adrenal weights did not differ. Thus gonadal, adrenomedullary, and adrenocortical activities appear higher in CM. Adrenal functioning indicates that isolation per se is no more stressful than group living. At their 13th month of age CM and IM did not differ in their behaviors during a 1 hr open-field exposure. This is not considered to result from similar 'emotional temperaments' but rather from an inappropriate procedure to study 'emotionality' in adult guinea pigs. At their 14th month of age CM and IM were placed into the home cage of a male experienced fighter for 15 min. The agonistic encounters between the resident and CM occurred more frequently and were more escalated than between the resident and IM. IM may be a weaker stimulus for attack possibly due to a decreased production of androgen dependent pheromones as indicated by the decreased seminal vesicles weights. Eight IM placed into the colonies at their 16th month of age lost 16.3 to 20.9% of their initial body weights. Three IM died within 8 days although they were not attacked by CM. The 5 surviving males gained low ranking social positions, showed a high degree of arousal and probably were not able to reproduce.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effects of long-term isolation on physiology and behavior in male guinea pigs. 287 50

Sprague-Dawley rats aged 6 to 22 months were stressed for 2, 16 and 9m resp. by the influence of noise (106 dB, 2h/d) and overcrowding (12 rats/Makrolon-IV-cage). Parameters of the plasma, brain, testicles and the liver (enzymes, metabolites and hormones) and well-known age parameters were evaluated to obtain objective criteria for stress influences. The weights of the whole body and some organs were also measured. The most distinct changes were seen in the plasma enzyme activities CPK, ALD, CHE and AP, in the concentrations of CHO and TRG and in the levels of testosterone, corticosterone and aldosterone. The contraction-relaxation of the tail tendon and the soluble collagen of the corium changed in the direction of higher age, just as lipofuscine content in the brain, cerebellum and the adrenals did. Some activities of enzymes and concentrations of metabolites changed in the brain, liver the testicles. Adrenal weights rose sharply in both stress groups; the body weight was lower. There were some differences in the effects of the two stress factors. These investigations gave some information about the relation between stress and aging and provide a simple means of determining the influence of stress.
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PMID:[Aspects of stress and aging in the rat (author's transl)]. 611 91

Phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) is the enzyme that catalyzes the S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent methylation of (-)norepinephrine to (-)epinephrine in the adrenal medulla. Adrenal PNMT activity is markedly different in two highly inbred rat strains; enzyme activity in the F344 strain is more than fivefold greater than that in the Buf strain. Initial characterization of the enzyme in the two inbred strains reveals evidence for catalytic and structural differences, as reflected in dissimilar Km values for the cosubstrate (S-adenosyl-L-methionine) and prominent differences in thermal inactivation curves. To assess adrenal PNMT activity in an F344 X Buf pedigree, we employed a statistical procedure to test for one- and two-locus hypotheses in the presence of within-class correlations due to cage or litter effects. The PNMT data in the pedigree are best accounted for by segregation at a simple major locus superimposed upon a polygenic background; data obtained from the biochemical studies suggest that the major locus is a structural gene locus.
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PMID:Inheritance of adrenal phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase activity in the rat. 614 73

The effect of psychosocial stress produced by aggregation in a special cage designed by Henry was investigated in three separate experiments using Wistar-Kyoto (WKY), Sprague-Dawley (SD) and F1 hybrids of the Japanese spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto (SHR-WKY F1) rats. Each aggregated group displayed typical 'stressed' behavioural disturbances. Adrenal hypertrophy, elevation of plasma renin activity and gastric erosions were noted in male aggregated SD rats; while adrenal enlargement, elevation of plasma noradrenaline and gastric erosions were found in male aggregated SHR-WKY F1 rats. Sustained hypertension, however, did not develop in any strain nor in any subgroup within each strain. Gastric erosions were also noted in isolated SD and SHR-SKY F1 rats suggesting that long term isolation of rats also induces stress. Isolated rats also remained normotensive throughout. Reduced haematocrit was found in both aggregated and isolated male SHR-WKY F1 rats suggesting increased plasma volume. We conclude that neither stress due to psychosocial disturbances nor that due to isolation produces chronic hypertension in the three strains of rat studied.
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PMID:Failure of psychosocial stress to induce chronic hypertension in the rat. 654 22

Blood pressure and circulating catecholamines were evaluated in borderline hypertensive rats (BHR) that were exposed to daily sessions of either short (20 min) or long (120 min) duration air-jet stimulation. Indirect measures of systolic blood pressure indicated that within 2 weeks both experimental groups developed stress-induced hypertension in comparison to home cage controls. Animals exposed to 120 min stress sessions had significantly higher systolic blood pressure relative to the 20 min group. However, direct measures of blood pressure taken after 5 weeks of daily stress did not reveal any differences between the stress groups. Daily measurements indicated that acute changes in blood pressure during stress were modest and transient, suggesting little contribution to the chronic elevation in blood pressure observed as a consequence of stress. Circulating catecholamines were significantly increased by the stressor. Epinephrine returned to baseline within 60 min, although norepinephrine remained elevated throughout the 120 min session. The results indicate that increasing the duration of daily air jet stimulation did not impact the development of stress-induced hypertension over the 5-week measurement period.
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PMID:Stress-induced hypertension in the borderline hypertensive rat: stimulus duration. 851 Nov 66

Jim Henry demonstrated an animal's society can induce an increase in blood pressure and its cardiovascular sequale. He recognized that the stress required to elevate blood pressure was a function of the genetically determined behavioral traits of the mice used. He termed some strains aggressive, others peaceable. Being highly inbred (indeed isogenic strains) it was intriguing to find that the behavior of these genetically identical individuals could differ markedly once placed in a society that decreased territory. A dominant or "king" mouse emerged. Other non-dominant males were aggressive and striving to be king. Adrenal medullary systems were activated and renins high. Others huddled in one cage and appeared to have given up. Jim called them depressed. Their adrenal cortex was hyperplastic suggesting pituitary adrenal axis activation as in depression, their renin was low and corticosterone high. In rats, careful selection of a strain genetically aggressive had to be combined with titration of societal stress to reliably induce hypertension. Its likely that humans retain some, if not all, of these variations, i.e. some respond to stress with an increase in blood pressure and others do not, some respond via the sympathetic pathway and others by adrenal cortical activation. The suggestion that African American's high blood pressures is due to stress is relevant to the Henry paradigm and the known genetic influences on sodium retention in blacks. The integration of this paradigm with the genetically increased sensitivity to the blood pressure raising effects of dietary sodium in blacks is proposed and discussed.
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PMID:Stress hypertension: the "wrong" genes in the "wrong" environment. 940 24

Xenon has many properties of the ideal anaesthetic and it has been proposed to replace classic volatile anaesthetics. Although some studies demonstrated that xenon does not induce gross morphological changes in major organs, little is known on its possible ultrastructural effects. The present study investigates the subcellular effects of repeated exposures to 70% xenon on rat adrenal cortex in comparison with N2O. Animals were divided into four groups: xenon-exposed, N2O-exposed, sham-exposed and controls. Exposed rats were placed into a sealed cage to breathe the respective gas mixture for 2.5 h/day for a week. Specimens of adrenal cortex for electron microscopy and blood samples for determination of corticosterone plasma levels were taken at the end of the last exposure or one week after the last exposure (recovery). Adrenal cortex from N2O- and sham-exposed rats mainly showed dilation of endoplasmic reticulum, whereas xenon-exposed rats also exhibited several cells with lipid droplets appearing subdivided into smaller droplets, irregular in shape and size. In all experimental groups, corticosterone plasma levels increased in comparison to controls. Both ultrastructural and hormonal changes were not detected anymore after one week from the last exposure. These findings indicate that xenon is able to induce subcellular changes in rat adrenal cortex, mainly at the level of lipid structures. The transient changes induced by xenon suggest that this gas can be regarded as a safer anaesthetic.
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PMID:Effects of repeated exposures to xenon on rat adrenal cortex ultrastructure. 1240 67

We investigated whether or not three kinds of social stress (isolation, crowding, and confrontation) increase urinary excretion of biopyrrins, oxidative metabolites of bilirubin, in mice. Male BALB/c mice (4 weeks old) were housed 5 per cage for 10 days. After acclimatization, mice were exposed to the above mentioned three kinds of psychosocial stress. Mouse blood and urine samples were collected after 2, 7, and 30 days of stress. Serum levels of corticosterone and urinary levels of biopyrrins were determined by EIA and ELISA, respectively. Adrenal hypertrophy, significant increases in serum concentration of corticosterone and in urinary excretion of biopyrrins were observed in mice exposed to these types of social stress for 7 days. These levels decreased after 30 days, though they were still rather high compared to the control group. These results suggested that social stress causes oxidative stress and that biopyrrins could be useful biomarkers of psychosocial stress.
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PMID:Social stress increases biopyrrins, oxidative metabolites of bilirubin, in mouse urine. 1694 32


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