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Sub-chronic stress induces similar behavioral effects in male and female mice despite sex-specific molecular adaptations in the nucleus accumbens

Women are more likely than men to suffer from major depression and anxiety disorders, a fact that is thought to depend in part on sex differences in stress susceptibility. Consistent with this, several preclinical stress paradigms have been reported to exert differential effects in males vs. females...

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Published in:Behavioural brain research 2022-05, Vol.425, p.113811-113811, Article 113811
Main Authors: Baugher, Brittany J., Buckhaults, Kerry, Case, Jordan, Sullivan, Abigail, Huq, Shama N., Sachs, Benjamin D.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Women are more likely than men to suffer from major depression and anxiety disorders, a fact that is thought to depend in part on sex differences in stress susceptibility. Consistent with this, several preclinical stress paradigms have been reported to exert differential effects in males vs. females. For example, several studies have reported that female rodents are susceptible to a subset of depression- and anxiety-like behaviors induced by six days of stress exposure while males remain largely resilient. The current study sought to evaluate the generalizability of this increased vulnerability of female mice to sub-chronic stressors by examining potential sex differences in response to a new five-day stress paradigm. In addition to measuring behavior, the current work also evaluated the effects of stress on the expression of several genes in the nucleus accumbens that have been suggested to underlie sex differences in behavioral responses to sub-chronic stress. The current results indicate that males and females exhibit mostly similar behavioral alterations after exposure to this new stress model, but several sex-specific molecular alterations were observed in the nucleus accumbens following stress. Overall, our data indicate that females do not exhibit a general increase in susceptibility to ‘depression-’ and ‘anxiety-like’ behaviors induced by sub-chronic stressors, and they could reflect an example of sexual convergence in which similar behavioral alterations occur in males and females despite sex-specific molecular changes.
ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2022.113811