Learned helplessness and social avoidance in the Wistar-Kyoto rat

Nam, Hyungwoo and Clinton, Sarah M. and Jackson, Nateka L. and Kerman, Ilan A. (2014) Learned helplessness and social avoidance in the Wistar-Kyoto rat. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 8. ISSN 1662-5153

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Abstract

The Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat is an established depression model characterized by elevated anxiety- and depression-like behavior across a variety of tests. Here we further characterized specific behavioral and functional domains relevant to depression that are altered in WKY rats. Moreover, since early-life experience potently shapes emotional behavior, we also determined whether aspects of WKYs' phenotype were modifiable by early-life factors using neonatal handling or maternal separation. We first compared WKYs' behavior to that of Sprague–Dawley (SD), Wistar, and Spontaneously Hypertensive (SHR) rats in: the open field test, elevated plus maze, novelty-suppressed feeding test, a social interaction test, and the forced swim test (FST). WKYs exhibited high baseline immobility in the FST and were the only strain to show increased immobility on FST Day 2 vs. Day 1 (an indicator of learned helplessness). WKYs also showed greater social avoidance, along with enlarged adrenal glands and hearts relative to other strains. We next tested whether neonatal handling or early-life maternal separation stress influenced WKYs' behavior. Neither manipulation affected their anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors, likely due to a strong genetic underpinning of their phenotype. Our findings indicate that WKY rats are a useful model that captures specific functional domains relevant to clinical depression including: psychomotor retardation, behavioral inhibition, learned helplessness, social withdrawal, and physiological dysfunction. WKY rats appear to be resistant to early-life manipulations (i.e., neonatal handling) that are therapeutic in other strains, and may be a useful model for the development of personalized anti-depressant therapies for treatment resistant depression.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM One > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmone.org
Date Deposited: 11 Mar 2023 09:15
Last Modified: 30 Jul 2024 06:39
URI: http://publications.openuniversitystm.com/id/eprint/484

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