0 286

Cited 9 times in

Neonatal footshock stress alters adult behavior and hippocampal corticosteroid receptors

Authors
 Kim, Dong Goo  ;  Lee, Seoul  ;  Lim, Jong Su 
Citation
 NEUROREPORT, Vol.10(12) : 2551-2556, 1999 
Journal Title
NEUROREPORT
ISSN
 0959-4965 
Issue Date
1999
MeSH
Animals ; Animals, Newborn ; Behavior, Animal/physiology* ; Body Weight/physiology ; Electroshock ; Hippocampus/growth & development ; Hippocampus/physiology* ; Male ; Radioligand Assay ; Rats ; Rats, Sprague-Dawley ; Receptors, Steroid/physiology*
Abstract
To determine the effects of stress early in life on adult behavior and hippocampal corticosteroid receptors, rats were exposed to footshocks (0.8 mA, 60 times/day, randomly apart) on postnatal days 14, 17 and 20. When they reached 6 months of age, neurobehavioral alterations were measured. The footshock-experienced rats learned more rapidly in the autoshaped learning test than similarly handled controls. They also stabilized more quickly after exposure to a novel environment than the handled controls, but only at the same rate as animals which had not been handled except for weighing. The density of [3H]dexamethasone binding sites increased and that of [3H]corticosterone binding sites decreased in the hippocampi of these rats. These results indicate that early life stress results in altered behavior and hippocampal corticosteroid receptors at adulthood, and suggest that the mineralocorticoid and the glucocorticoid receptors are differentially regulated by early life stress.
Full Text
https://oce.ovid.com/article/00001756-199908200-00021/HTML
DOI
10.1097/00001756-199908200-00021
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pharmacology (약리학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Dong Goo(김동구)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/172880
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links