IMMEDIATE-EARLY GENE-EXPRESSION TO EXAMINE NEURONAL-ACTIVITY FOLLOWING ACUTE AND CHRONIC STRESSORS IN RAT PUPS - EXAMINATION OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL ALTERATIONS UNDERLYING BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES OF PRENATAL COCAINE EXPOSURE
Ga. Goodwin et al., IMMEDIATE-EARLY GENE-EXPRESSION TO EXAMINE NEURONAL-ACTIVITY FOLLOWING ACUTE AND CHRONIC STRESSORS IN RAT PUPS - EXAMINATION OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL ALTERATIONS UNDERLYING BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES OF PRENATAL COCAINE EXPOSURE, Physiology & behavior, 61(6), 1997, pp. 895-902
Altered behavioral responses to stressors have been observed in animal
s exposed to cocaine prenatally. In the present study, both behavioral
and physiological responses to repeated and single stressor exposure
were measured in animals prenatally exposed to cocaine. Offspring were
derived from 3 prenatal treatment groups: dams that were administered
40 mg/kg cocaine from gestational day 8-20 (C40); dams that were pair
-fed and -watered to weight-matched C40 dams (PF); and untreated dams
(LCC). Starting on postnatal day 16-17 (P16-17), offspring from the 3
prenatal treatment groups were exposed to either footshock or isolatio
n daily for 5 days. Two days after the last day of stressor exposure (
P21-22), subjects were given 1 final exposure to the stressor to which
they were previously exposed. In addition, at P21-22, littermates of
animals given repeated exposure to stressors were exposed to either fo
otshock or isolation for the first and only time. During all footshock
sessions, the duration of freezing behavior was recorded. Plasma adre
nocorticotrophin (ACTH) and corticosterone levels were determined from
blood samples taken immediately following the final stressor session
and brains were processed for C-FOS immunoreactivity (FOS-IR). Plasma
corticosterone was increased following either single or repeated expos
ure to either stressor compared to homecage control animals. Plasma AC
TH was increased by exposure to both repeated and single footshock exp
osure, bur the increase was not as great following repeated footshock
exposure, suggesting adaptation to repeated exposure to this stressor.
Following both single and repeated footshock exposure, FOS-IR was inc
reased relative to baseline levels in the paraventricular nucleus of t
he hypothalamus (PVN) and in the supraoptic nucleus (SON), but not the
locus coeruleus (LC). Repeatedly footshocked animals exhibited more t
ime freezing than animals given a single footshock session. Prenatal e
xposure to cocaine resulted in more time spent freezing in C40 than LC
C animals during the chronic footshock exposure period; however, no di
fferences were seen in any of the physiological measures taken from th
ese 2 groups on the final test day. The implications of these findings
are discussed in the context of other research examining the effects
of prenatal cocaine exposure on stress responses. (C) 1997 Elsevier Sc
ience Inc.