Changes in head twitch response induced by a 5-hydroxytryptamine agonist in mice fed a low-protein diet |
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Authors: | Minakami K Shimizu T Toriire Y Fukuda T |
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Affiliation: | Department of Liberal Arts, School of Allied Medical Sciences. |
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Abstract: | Long-term intake of a protein diet in infants causes the malnutrition syndrome known as kwashiorkor. Neurological symptoms in kwashiorkor have been reported occasionally. We studied the effects of malnutrition on murine behaviour by feeding growing mice a long-term low-protein diet. Three groups of 3-week-old male ddY mice were fed protein-controlled diets of 8,15 and 25% (control group) of total diet weight for 11 weeks immediately after weaning. The number of head twitches in 2 min were measured 2 min after injection of 10 mg/kg 5 -methoxy- N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeODMT), a 5 -hydroxytryptamine (5 -HT) receptor agonist i.p. Organs were weighed after 10 weeks of feeding. Intracerebral monoamines and their metabolites were assayed using high performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. Bodyweights of mice that were fed the 8% protein diet for 10 weeks were lower than in the other groups. The frequencies of the 5 -MeODMT-induced head twitch in mice that were fed the 8% low-protein diet for 4, 7 and 10 weeks were, respectively, 37.4, 21.4 and 45.2% those of the control group. The frequencies of head twitch also decreased in mice that were fed the 15% low-protein diet for 7 or 10 weeks. The locomotor activity of the mice was unchanged by the amount of protein in the diet. In assays of intracerebral monoamines, 5-HT and 5-HIAA in the whole brain and metabolic turnover of 5-HT increased significantly in mice that were fed the 8% low-protein diet for 11 weeks. Results suggest that head twitches in mice on long-term low-protein diets are suppressed due to the changes in the intracerebral serotonin system. |
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