Tesis
Aversão ao contexto associado ao estresse de derrota social em camundongos : um estudo etológico
Fecha
2015-04-01Registro en:
Autor
Crestani, Ariela Maltarolo
Institución
Resumen
Aggressive interactions between conspecific animals have been used as an
ethological source of social stress to study some aspects of social anxiety. Through this
work we used a new experimental protocol in order to develop a new behavioural
paradigm in the study of social anxiety. Mice were exposed to an apparatus adapted
from rat exposure test (RET) and it consisted of three interconnected regions: home
chamber, tunnel and surface area. Animals were exposed to the experimental apparatus
for five consecutive days, being the first three days for habituation to the apparatus
(habituation 1 , 2 and 3) and on the fourth day occurred the social interaction between
conspecifics (not aggressive for animals from "non-defeated group" and aggressive for
animals from "defeated group"). On the fifth and final experimental day the animals
were re-exposed to the apparatus for 10 minutes and the following behaviors were
assessed: frequency of entries and time spent in the three regions of the apparatus (home
chamber/tunnel/surface area), frequency of the stretched attend posture (SAP) behaviour
in the three regions, time spent on self-grooming in the three regions, frequency of
rearing in the surface area and latency to reach the surface area once the animals were
re-exposed to the experimental apparatus. Factor analysis was used in this study to
trace the behavioural profile of socially defeated mice (n=90) when re-exposed to the
apparatus where the aggressive interaction occurred; we also compared the behavioural
profile of non-defeated (n=89) and defeated (n=90) mice when re-exposed to the
context where social (non-aggressive or aggressive) interaction occurred, using
Student’s t test. Final factor analysis yielded 4 factors that together represent 72.09% of
total variance: factor 1 was loaded with time spent in the home chamber and in the
surface area and self-grooming in the home chamber, while factor 2 loaded on time
spent in the tunnel and total entries in the three compartments of the apparatus (home
chamber, tunnel and surface area). Factor 3 was loaded with SAP frequency in the
tunnel and in the surface area; and factor 4 was loaded only with latency to reach the
surface area. Student’s t test showed that socially defeated mice spent more time to
reach the surface area and performing self-grooming in the home chamber when
compared to non-defeated mice. Together, these results suggest that the increase in the
latency to reach the surface area and self-grooming in the home chamber were
conditioned to a single social defeat, but there were no conditioning for classical
measures such as: place aversion and risk assessment behaviour (SAP).