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Peptides ; 158: 170882, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36150631

RESUMO

The medial-lateral habenula (LHbM)'s role in anxiety and depression behaviors in female mice remains unclear. Here, we used neonatal maternal deprivation (MD) and post-weaning environmental enrichment (EE) to treat female BALB/c offspring and checked anxiety-like and depression-like behaviors as well as the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), oxytocin receptor (OTR), estrogen receptor-beta (ERß) levels in their LHbM at adulthood. We found that MD enhanced state anxiety-like behaviors in the elevated plus-maze test, and EE caused trait anxiety-like behaviors in the open field test and depression-like behaviors in the tail suspension test. The immunochemistry showed that MD reduced OT immunoreactive neuron numbers in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus but increased OTR levels in the LHbM; EE increased CRH levels in the LHbM but decreased OTR levels in the LHbM. The additive effects of EE and MD maintained the behavioral parameters, OT-ir neuronal numbers, CRH levels, and OTR levels similar to the additive of non-MD and non-EE. The correlation analysis showed that CRH levels correlated with synaptic connection levels, OTR levels correlated with nucleus densities, and ERß levels correlated with Nissl body levels and body weights in female mice. Neither MD nor EE affected ERß levels in the LHbM. Together, the study revealed the relationships between behaviors and neuroendocrine and neuronal alterations in female LHbM and the effects of experiences including MD and EE on them.


Assuntos
Habenula , Ocitocina , Animais , Feminino , Camundongos , Ocitocina/farmacologia , Hormônio Liberador da Corticotropina , Privação Materna , Receptor beta de Estrogênio/genética , Habenula/metabolismo , Depressão , Receptores de Ocitocina/genética , Ansiedade
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