Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5925092 Physiology & Behavior 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The SHR Y chromosome has loci which are involved with behavioral, endocrine and brain phenotypes and respond to acute stress to a different degree than that of the WKY Y chromosome. The objectives were to determine if WKY males with an SHR Y chromosome (SHR/y) when compared to males with a WKY Y chromosome would have: 1. a greater increase in systolic and diastolic blood pressures (BP), heart rate (HR), and locomotor activity when placed in an open field environment and during an acute stress procedure; 2. enhanced stress hormone responses; 3. greater voluntary running; and 4. increased brain Sry expression. The SHR/y strain showed a significant rise in BP (32%) and HR (10%) during the open field test and exhibited higher BP (46% change) during air jet stress. SHR/y had higher locomotor activity and less immobility and had increased stress induced plasma norepinephrine and adrenocorticotrophic hormone and 3-4 × more voluntary running compared to WKY. Differential Sry expression between WKY and SHR/y in amygdala and hippocampus was altered at rest and during acute stress more than that of WKY. Evidence suggests that this animal model allows novel functions of Y chromosome loci to be revealed. In conclusion, a transcription factor on the SHR Y chromosome, Sry, may be responsible for the cardiovascular, endocrine and behavioral phenotype differences between SHR/y and WKY males.

► This research is novel and contributes to the scientific field by determining a behavioral effect of a genetic cross which took 19 rat generations to develop of the Y chromosome from an spontaneously hypertensive rat backcrossed into a normotensive WKY autosomal background. ► We have published several papers describing the blood pressure effect of the SHR Y chromosome but are only beginning to understand how this Y chromosome affects behavior like reaction in the open field and cardiovascular responses, physiological stress responses, running activity and Sry expression in the brain.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Physiology
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