Experimental gastritis leads to anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in female but not male rats

被引:0
作者
Jia Luo
Tao Wang
Shan Liang
Xu Hu
Wei Li
Feng Jin
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology
[2] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
Behavioral and Brain Functions | / 9卷
关键词
Gastrointestinal-brain axis; Iodoacetamide-induced gastritis; Anxiety; Depression; Gender difference;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Human and animals studies support the idea that there is a gender-related co-morbidity of pain-related and inflammatory gastrointestinal (GI) diseases with psychological disorders. This co-morbidity is the evidence for the existence of GI-brain axis which consists of immune (cytokines), neural (vagus nerve) and neuroendocrine (HPA axis) pathways. Psychological stress causes disturbances in GI physiology, such as altered GI barrier function, changes in motility and secretion, development of visceral hypersensitivity, and dysfunction of inflammatory responses. Whether GI inflammation would exert impact on psychological behavior is not well established. We examined the effect of experimental gastritis on anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in male and female Sprague–Dawley rats, and evaluated potential mechanisms of action. Gastritis was induced by adding 0.1% (w/v) iodoacetamide (IAA) to the sterile drinking water for 7 days. Sucrose preference test assessed the depression-like behavior, open field test and elevated plus maze evaluated the anxiety-like behavior. IAA treatment induced gastric inflammation in rats of either gender. No behavioral abnormality or dysfunction of GI-brain axis was observed in male rats with IAA-induced gastritis. Anxiety- and depression-like behaviors were apparent and the HPA axis was hyperactive in female rats with IAA-induced gastritis. Our results show that gastric inflammation leads to anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in female but not male rats via the neuroendocrine (HPA axis) pathway, suggesting that the GI inflammation can impair normal brain function and induce changes in psychological behavior in a gender-related manner through the GI-to-brain signaling.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 412 条
  • [1] Mayer EA(2011)Gut feelings: the emerging biology of gut–brain communication Nat Rev Neurosci 12 453-466
  • [2] Cryan JF(2011)The microbiome-gut-brain axis: from bowel to behavior Neurogastroenterol Motil 23 187-192
  • [3] O’Mahony SM(2010)Irritable bowel syndrome, anxiety, depression and personality characteristics Psychiatr Danub 22 418-424
  • [4] Suzana Tosic-Golubovic SM(2008)State and trait anxiety and depression in patients affected by gastrointestinal diseases: psychometric evaluation of 1641 patients referred to an internal medicine outpatient setting Int J Clin Pract 62 1063-1069
  • [5] Aleksandar N(2012)Anxiety-depressive disorders among irritable bowel syndrome patients in Guilan Iran. BMC Res Notes 5 112-1673
  • [6] Dusan L(2008)Determinants of symptoms in functional dyspepsia: gastric sensorimotor function, psychosocial factors or somatisation? Gut 57 1666-632
  • [7] Gordana N(2011)Anxiety and depression in patients with inflammatory bowel disease: comparisons with chronic liver disease patients and the general population Inflamm Bowel Dis 17 621-86
  • [8] Addolorato G(2013)Anxiety, personality traits and quality of life in functional dyspepsia‒suffering patients Eur J Intern Med 24 83-40
  • [9] Mirijello A(2007)Corticotropin-releasing factor receptors and stress-related alterations of gut motor function J Clin Invest 117 33-142
  • [10] D’Angelo C(2004)Role of peripheral CRF signalling pathways in stress-related alterations of gut motility and mucosal function Neurogastroenterol Motil 16 137-933