Tail skin temperatures reflect coping styles in rats

被引:7
作者
Agren, Greta [1 ]
Lund, Irene [2 ]
Thiblin, Ingemar [1 ]
Lundeberg, Thomas [3 ]
机构
[1] RMV, Dept Forens Med, SE-75140 Uppsala, Sweden
[2] Karolinska Inst, Dept Physiol & Pharmacol, Stockholm, Sweden
[3] Sabbatsbergs Hosp, Fdn Acupuncture & Alternat Biol Treatment Methods, S-11382 Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
Adrenals; Epididymal adipose tissue; Group-housing; Growth; Heart; Lewis male rats; Non-invasive assessments; Pituitaries; Tail skin temperature; Social rank; Spleen; Stress coping styles; Testes; Visceral adipose tissue; CORTICOTROPIN-RELEASING-FACTOR; ADIPOSE-TISSUE; SOCIAL STRESS; ENERGY-CONSERVATION; STRAIN DIFFERENCES; BODY-TEMPERATURE; ADRENAL AXIS; LEWIS; CORTICOSTERONE; NEUROENDOCRINE;
D O I
10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.11.003
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This study was carried out to elucidate the predictive value of tail skin temperatures (TSTs) assessed in naive rats as a non-invasive pre-experimental method of classification of coping style. Male Lewis rats were classified according to tail skin temperatures (TST), and relative size within cage-groups. TSTs were monitored over two-hour periods following exposure to physical and emotional stressors. Bodyweight-shifts associated to the experiments were analysed. Six organs of neuroendocrine relevance to allostasis were weighed. Challenge-specific TST-profiles were size-related and consistent with proactive or reactive coping. Pro-active (A) rats showed a more pronounced TST-response to unknown conspecifics, but reactive (B) rats to environmental novelties. B-rats showed challenge-specific weight-losses while A-rats gained more after experiments. Second size males showed rapidly decreased TSTs (vasoconstriction) after nociceptive stimulation. Males that showed the highest basal TSTs and weight-loss in emotionality tests had lost a first rank position during a pre-experimental period. suggesting long-lasting effects of social defeat. Pre-experimental growth correlated positively to adiposisity post-experimentally. but negatively to testes relative weight in B-rats Scaling effects explained heart-size in 8-rats and pituitary-size in A-rats. The overall patterns that emerged, in factor analyses including organ sizes, were consistent with pro-active coping in A-rats and reactive in B-rats. Our results, controlling for rank-effects, suggest that non-invasively assessed TSTs may predict individual stress-coping phenotypes pre-experimentally in rats housed in groups. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:374 / 382
页数:9
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