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Enriched environment impacts trimethylthiazoline‐induced anxiety‐related behavior and immediate early gene expression: critical role of C rhr1
Author(s) -
Sotnikov S. V.,
Chekmareva N. Y.,
Schmid B.,
Harbich D.,
Malik V.,
Bauer S.,
Kuehne C.,
Markt P. O.,
Deussing J. M.,
Schmidt M. V.,
Landgraf R.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.12624
Subject(s) - anxiolytic , amygdala , basolateral amygdala , elevated plus maze , odor , knockout mouse , anxiogenic , medicine , endocrinology , anxiety , psychology , chemistry , neuroscience , receptor , psychiatry
Abstract It has been shown previously (Sotnikov et al ., [Sotnikov, S.V., 2011]) that mice selectively inbred for high anxiety‐related behavior ( HAB ) vs. low anxiety‐related behavior in the elevated plus maze differentially respond to trimethylthiazoline ( TMT ), a synthetic fox fecal odor. However, less is known about whether environmental factors can rescue these extreme phenotypes. Here, we found that an enriched environment ( EE ) provided during early adolescence induced anxiolytic effects in HAB ( HAB ‐ EE ) mice, rescuing their strong avoidance behavior induced by TMT . In a series of experiments, the contribution of maternal, juvenile and adolescent behavior to the anxiolytic effects elicited by EE was investigated. At the molecular level, using c‐fos expression mapping, we found that the activity of the medial and basolateral amygdala was significantly reduced in HAB ‐ EE mice after TMT exposure. We further analysed the expression of C rhr1 , as its amount in the amygdala has been reported to be important for the regulation of anxiety‐related behavior after EE . Indeed, in situ hybridisation indicated significantly decreased C rhr1 expression in the basolateral and central amygdala of HAB ‐ EE mice. To further test the involvement of C rhr1 in TMT ‐induced avoidance, we exposed conditional glutamatergic‐specific C rhr1 ‐knockout mice to the odor. The behavioral response of C rhr1 ‐knockout mice mimicked that of HAB ‐ EE mice, and c‐fos expression in the amygdala after TMT exposure was significantly lower compared with controls, thereby further supporting a critical involvement of C rhr1 in environmentally‐induced anxiolysis. Altogether, our results indicate that EE can rescue strong avoidance of TMT by HAB mice with C rhr1 expression in the amygdala being critically involved.