scholarly journals INTERSTRAIN DIFFERENCES IN EMOTIONAL AND WEIGHT INDICES IN GC RATS WITH CATATONIC RESPONSE AND WISTAR RATS

2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 452-458
Author(s):  
T. A. Alekhina ◽  
R. V. Kozhemjakina

In selecting rats for behavior, we observe a direct natural effect and affect the nonspecific stress function. In this process, new behavioral phenotypes appear in the strain under selection. They differ from the selected forms in the selection criterion. In the GC strain, a large proportion of the so-called nervous rats emerge. The criterion presumes the selection for the long cataleptic freezing character, whereas the nervous rats display elevated motor excitement: running, jumping, and vocalization. The main purpose of our study was to assess phenotypic indices in GC rats (abbreviated from genetic and catatonia) and recognize principal components of variability for emotional and weight indices. Rats of the ancestral Wistar population were taken as control. The following indices were measured: time of cataleptic freezing, excitement level, blood pressure, acoustic startle response, seizure  activity, and weights of the heart, kidneys, adrenals, and spleen. Multivariate analysis methods were applied: factor analysis and principal component analysis. We confirmed the inclination of GC rats of the generation studied to freezing in quiet surrounding and after a strong acoustic sti - mulus. More pronounced startle responses,  moderate hypertension, and larger weights of the heart and adrenals were noted. Two principal variability components were recognized: startle amplitude (PC1) and morphofunctional variability (PC2). The figure shows different locations of Wistar and GC individuals in principal component coordinates. The principal component method confirmed the genetic relationship between the startle and nervousness responses. It was shown that in PC2 the indices of heart, kidney, adrenal, and spleen weight exert negative effects, whereas the effects of startle and nervousness were positive. In the same component, an increase in the startle and nervousness responses positively correlates with the relative weights of the heart and adrenals. Differences in the directions of the contributions to the second component of morphofunctional variability are discussed.

1985 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Chris Anderson ◽  
Charles R. Crowell ◽  
Judson S. Brown

In a widely cited, unpublished study, abstracted at length herein, Meryman in 1952 reported that the acoustic startle response of the rat was potentiated by conditioned fear, by food deprivation, and summatively by both combined. Whereas others have verified the action of fear on startle, only scattered support has been obtained for the conclusion that startle can be potentiated by an appetitive variable. Because of the significance of this matter for general drive theory, further study is imperative. The present experiment, a replication and extension of Meryman's, was guided by a design in which two levels of fear and two of food deprivation were combined factorially. Two groups of rats, one deprived for 40 hr. and one for 1 hr., were shocked in a stabilimeter chamber to condition fear to the cues of that situation. Two other, nonfearful groups, one of which was deprived for 40 hr. and the other for 1 hr., were never shocked in the stabilimeter. Instead, they were shocked in a distinctively different chamber to control for amount of aversive stimulation across groups. Results provided by measurements of startle amplitude coincided with Meryman's in that response magnitudes increased over conditioning trials for the fearful animals but not for the controls and in that rats which were both fearful and deprived exhibited stronger reactions than fearful-only or deprived-only subjects. However, the appetitive variable alone did not exert a potentiating effect. Heart-rate recordings provided marginal evidence for the conditioning of fear. Our results and Meryman's, as well as the discrepancies between them, are explained as due to the depressing effect of near-satiation on the capacity of fear to potentiate startle.


1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Foss ◽  
James R. Ison ◽  
James P. Torre ◽  
Wansack Jr ◽  
Samuel

2008 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. S70 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.B. Quednow ◽  
I. Frommann ◽  
J. Berning ◽  
K.U. Kühn ◽  
W. Maier ◽  
...  

NeuroImage ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 1052-1058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veena Kumari ◽  
Elena Antonova ◽  
Elizabeth Zachariah ◽  
Adrian Galea ◽  
Ingrid Aasen ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document