Repeated social defeat induces transient glial activation and brain hypometabolism: A positron emission tomography imaging study

Paula Kopschina Feltes, Erik FJ de Vries, Luis E Juarez-Orozco, Ewelina Kurtys, Rudi AJO Dierckx, Cristina M Moriguchi-Jeckel, Janine Doorduin
2017 Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism  
Psychosocial stress is a risk factor for the development of depression. Recent evidence suggests that glial activation could contribute to the development of depressive-like behaviour. This study aimed to evaluate in vivo whether repeated social defeat (RSD) induces short- and long-term inflammatory and metabolic alterations in the brain through positron emission tomography (PET). Male Wistar rats ( n = 40) were exposed to RSD by dominant Long-Evans rats on five consecutive days. Behavioural
more » ... biochemical alterations were assessed at baseline, day 5/6 and day 24/25 after the RSD protocol. Glial activation (11C-PK11195 PET) and changes in brain metabolism (18F-FDG PET) were evaluated on day 6, 11 and 25 (short-term), and at 3 and 6 months (long-term). Defeated rats showed transient depressive- and anxiety-like behaviour, increased corticosterone and brain IL-1β levels, as well as glial activation and brain hypometabolism in the first month after RSD. During the third- and six-month follow-up, no between-group differences in any investigated parameter were found. Therefore, non-invasive PET imaging demonstrated that RSD induces transient glial activation and reduces brain glucose metabolism in rats. These imaging findings were associated with stress-induced behavioural changes and support the hypothesis that neuroinflammation could be a contributing factor in the development of depression.
doi:10.1177/0271678x17747189 pmid:29271288 pmcid:PMC6399731 fatcat:6lwzmpf7cbg3vnua5emqbgawcy