Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2493449 Neuropharmacology 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We show long-term effects of chronic social stress exposure during development, 5 weeks after stress.•Post-stress treatment with paroxetine can reverse the adult stressed phenotype.•Stress, treatment and ageing interact to create the phenotype.•In aged animals, stress effects are modulated by adult paroxetine treatment.•We identified long-term effects of the SSRI treatment alone.

Exposure to chronic stress during developmental periods is a risk factor for a number of psychiatric disorders. While the direct effects of stress exposure have been studied extensively, little is known about the long-lasting effects and the interaction with ageing. The same holds true for the treatment with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which have been shown to prevent or reverse some stress-induced effects. Here, we studied the direct and long-lasting impact of chronic social stress during adolescence and the impact of chronic treatment with the SSRI paroxetine in adulthood and aged animals. Therefore, male CD1 mice at the age of 28 days were subjected to 7 weeks of chronic social stress. Treatment with paroxetine was performed per os with a dosage of 20 mg/g BW. We were able to reverse most of the effects of chronic social stress in adult mice (4 months old) and to some extend in aged animals (15 months old) with the SSRI treatment. Especially the regulation of the HPA axis seems to be affected in aged mice with a shift to the use of vasopressin. Our results demonstrate that chronic stress exposure and antidepressant treatment at the end of the developmental period can have a significant and long-lasting impact, highly relevant for healthy ageing.

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