Microorganisms (Jul 2023)

Anxiety-like Behavior in Female Sprague Dawley Rats Associated with Cecal Clostridiales

  • Tracey Bear,
  • Nicole Roy,
  • Julie Dalziel,
  • Chrissie Butts,
  • Jane Coad,
  • Wayne Young,
  • Shanthi G. Parkar,
  • Duncan Hedderley,
  • Hannah Dinnan,
  • Sheridan Martell,
  • Susanne Middlemiss-Kraak,
  • Pramod Gopal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11071773
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1773

Abstract

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The relationship between the microbiota profile and exposure to stress is not well understood. Therefore, we used a rat model of unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS) to investigate this relationship. Depressive-like behaviors were measured in Female Sprague Dawley rats using the sucrose preference test and the Porsolt swim test. Anxiety-like behaviors were measured with the light–dark box test. Fecal corticosterone, cecal microbiota (composition and organic acids), plasma gut permeability (lipopolysaccharide-binding protein, LBP) and plasma inflammation (12 cytokines) markers were measured. Atypical behaviors were observed in female rats following UCMS, but no depressive-like behaviors were observed. Circulating concentrations of cytokines granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant 1 were higher in UCMS-exposed female rats; plasma LBP and cecal organic acid levels remained unchanged. Our results reflect a resilient and adaptive phenotype for female SD rats. The relative abundance of taxa from the Clostridiales order and Desulfovibrionaceae family did, however, correlate both positively and negatively with anxiety-like behaviors and plasma cytokine concentrations, regardless of UCMS exposure, supporting the brain-to-gut influence of mild anxiety with a microbiota profile that may involve inflammatory pathways.

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