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Beneficial effects of highly palatable food on the behavioral and neural adversities induced by early life stress experience in female rats

Cited 11 time in Web of Science Cited 11 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Jin Young; Lee, Jong-Ho; Kim, Doyun; Kim, Soung-Min; Koo, JaeHyung; Jahng, Jeong Won

Issue Date
2015-08
Publisher
Ivyspring International Publisher
Citation
International Journal of Biological Sciences, Vol.11 No.10, pp.1150-1159
Abstract
This study examined the effects of highly palatable food during adolescence on the psycho-emotional and neural disturbances caused by early life stress experience in female rats. Female Sprague-Dawley pups were separated from dam for 3 h daily during the first two weeks of birth (MS) or left undisturbed (NH). Half of MS females received free access to chocolate cookies in addition to ad libitum chow from postnatal day 28. Pups were subjected to the behavioral tests during young adulthood. The plasma corticosterone response to acute stress, Delta FosB and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in the brain regions were analyzed. Total caloric intake and body weight gain during the whole experimental period did not differ among the experimental groups. Cookie access during adolescence and youth improved anxiety-/depression-like behaviors by MS experience. Delta FosB expression was decreased, but BDNF was increased in the nucleus accumbens of MS females, and Delta FosB expression was normalized and BDNF was further increased following cookie access. Corticosterone response to acute stress was blunted by MS experience and cookie access did not improve it. Results suggest that cookie access during adolescence improves the psycho-emotional disturbances of MS females, and Delta FosB and/or BDNF expression in the nucleus accumbens may play a role in its underlying neural mechanisms.
ISSN
1449-2288
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/207165
DOI
https://doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.12044
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