Effects of prenatal diazepam on two-way avoidance behavior,swimming navigation and brain levels of benzodiazepine-like molecules in male roman high- and low-avoidance rats |
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Authors: | P. Driscoll P. Ferré A. Fernández-Teruel A. Tobeña R. M. Escorihuela M. Levi de Stein C. Wolfman J. Medina |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institut für Nutztierwissenschaften, ETH-Zentrum, Turnerstrasse 1, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland;(2) Medical Psychology Unit, Department of Pharmacology and Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain;(3) Instituto de Biologia Celular, Facultad de Medicina, UBA, Paraguay 2155, Buenos Aires, Argentina |
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Abstract: | Utilizing psychogenetically selected Roman high- and low-avoidance rats (RHA/Verh and RLA/Verh), the present experiments investigated the effects of prenatally administered vehicle and diazepam (1 and 3 mg/kg per day, SC) on the behavior and neurochemistry of adult, male offspring. Active, two-way avoidance behavior was analyzed in 96 rats, at 6 months of age, and swimming navigation in 68 others, at 11 months. Three weeks after testing, selected brain areas from the latter animals were immunoassayed for benzodiazepine (BZD)-like molecules. The 3 mg/kg dose of diazepam both decreased freezing behavior in the shuttle box and reduced the hippocampal content of BZD-like molecules in the RLA/Verh male rats. Swimming navigation (spatial learning), at which the RLA/Verh rats were more adept, was not specifically affected by prenatal diazepam in either rat line. The possibility exists that an increased hippocampal release of BZD-like substances may be necessary to alter shuttle box behavior in RLA/Verh rats. |
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Keywords: | Diazepam Two-way, active avoidance Swimming navigation Roman high- and low-avoidance rats Benzodiazepine-like molecules Genetic selection |
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