Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10307013 | Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
To test whether glucocorticoids amplify incentive motivation, three groups of rats were adrenalectomized and replaced subcutaneously with pellets of corticosterone (B), containing 0, 30, or 80% B and cholesterol. A fourth group of sham adrenalectomized rats received cholesterol pellets. Animals were placed on a four-arm maze baited with 32% sucrose for 5-min daily sessions. After 7 days of minimal drinking on the maze at free-feeding weights, their body weights were gradually reduced to 90% of their free-feeding weights for the next 12 days (pre-shift phase). The sucrose concentration was reduced to 4% for the next 2 days (post-shift phase). B dose-dependently increased 32% sucrose intake, insulin secretion, and relative fat depots. Intake was reduced similarly in all groups following the shift to 4%, resulting in a relative B-dependent intake suppression following the shift to 4%. Videoscoring of locomotor activity indicated that search behaviors were not different between groups prior to the shift to 4%, whereas the increase in search behavior following the shift to 4% sucrose was entirely B-dependent. These data were predicted by a new model of chronic stress positing two regulatory axes on brain by glucocorticoids: one indirect axis by which glucocorticoids remodel energy stores to provide metabolic feedback and a direct axis whereby glucocorticoids act directly on brain to remodel appetitive structure.
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Authors
Norman Pecoraro, Francisca Gomez, Mary F. Dallman,