14 research outputs found
Short-Term Enrichment Makes Male Rats More Attractive, More Defensive and Alters Hypothalamic Neurons
Innate behaviors are shaped by contingencies built during evolutionary history. On the other hand, environmental stimuli play a significant role in shaping behavior. In particular, a short period of environmental enrichment can enhance cognitive behavior, modify effects of stress on learned behaviors and induce brain plasticity. It is unclear if modulation by environment can extend to innate behaviors which are preserved by intense selection pressure. In the present report we investigate this issue by studying effects of relatively short (14-days) environmental enrichment on two prominent innate behaviors in rats, avoidance of predator odors and ability of males to attract mates. We show that enrichment has strong effects on both the innate behaviors: a) enriched males were more avoidant of a predator odor than non-enriched controls, and had a greater rise in corticosterone levels in response to the odor; and b) had higher testosterone levels and were more attractive to females. Additionally, we demonstrate decrease in dendritic length of neurons of ventrolateral nucleus of hypothalamus, important for reproductive mate-choice and increase in the same in dorsomedial nucleus, important for defensive behavior. Thus, behavioral and hormonal observations provide evidence that a short period of environmental manipulation can alter innate behaviors, providing a good example of gene-environment interaction
Is LTP in the Hippocampus a Useful Model for Learning-Related Alterations in Gene Expression?
Cognitive performance of long-term institutionalized elderly patients with schizophrenia: A case control study
Long-Term Environmental Enrichment Leads to Regional Increases in Neurotrophin Levels in Rat Brain
Negative Neuroplasticity in Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury and Implications for Neurorehabilitation
Environmental Enrichment Extends Photoreceptor Survival and Visual Function in a Mouse Model of Retinitis Pigmentosa
Molecular Mechanisms of Environmental Enrichment: Impairments in Akt/GSK3β, Neurotrophin-3 and CREB Signaling
Experience of mice in a complex environment enhances neurogenesis and synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus of wild
type and transgenic mice harboring familial Alzheimer’s disease (FAD)-linked APPswe/PS1DE9. In FAD mice, this experience
also reduces levels of tau hyperphosphorylation and oligomeric b-amyloid. Although environmental enrichment has
significant effects on brain plasticity and neuropathology, the molecular mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown.
Here we show that environmental enrichment upregulates the Akt pathway, leading to the downregulation of glycogen
synthase kinase 3b (GSK3b), in wild type but not FAD mice. Several neurotrophic signaling pathways are activated in the
hippocampus of both wild type and FAD mice, including brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor
(NGF), and this increase is accompanied by the upregulation of the BDNF receptor, tyrosine kinase B (TrkB). Interestingly,
neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) is upregulated in the brains of wild type mice but not FAD mice, while insulin growth factor-1 (IGF-1)
is upregulated exclusively in the brains of FAD mice. Upregulation of neurotrophins is accompanied by the increase of NMethyl-
D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors in the hippocampus following environmental enrichment. Most importantly, we
observed a significant increase in levels of cAMP response element- binding (CREB) transcripts in the hippocampus of wild
type and FAD mice following environmental enrichment. However, CREB phosphorylation, a critical step for the initiation of
learning and memory-required gene transcription, takes place in the hippocampus of wild type but not of FAD mice. These
results suggest that experience of wild type mice in a complex environmental upregulates critical signaling that play a
major role in learning and memory in the hippocampus. However, in FAD mice, some of these pathways are impaired and
cannot be rescued by environmental enrichment
